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Lawyer 24th May 2013

I trot round the park today and listen to the Navy lark. I Oh dear, oh dear
Sub-lieutenatn Leslie Philips is up for promotion. He is turned down and dreams of being Nelson with Wren Chasen as Lady Hamilton Priceless.
A quiet day off out to the see our lawyer about Mary’s will. Such an exhausting business.
I win at Scrabble today, just and gets just under 400, Mary might get herrevenge tomorrow, I hope.

Obituary:

Thomas Messer
Thomas Messer, who has died aged 93, was the director of the Guggenheim Museum in New York who succeeded in swiping one of the finest collections of modern art from under the nose of the Tate Gallery.

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Thomas Messer Photo: DAVID HEALD/SOLOMON R GUGGENHEIM FOUNDATION
5:34PM BST 23 May 2013
The collection belonged to Peggy Guggenheim who, despite being a poor relation of the family, built up a fabulous collection of art by such figures as de Chirico, Picasso, Giacometti, Dali, Braque, Klee, Miro and Mondrian as well as works by American Abstract Expressionists including her “discovery”, Jackson Pollock. From the 1920s Peggy Guggenheim spent much of her life in Europe, where she is said to have slept with 1,000 men. Gore Vidal described her as “the last of Henry James’s transatlantic heroines: Daisy Miller with rather more balls’’.
The Tate blotted its copybook with Peggy Guggenheim in 1938 when its then director, JB Manson, certified that some sculptures which she wanted to show at a gallery she had opened in Cork Street were not art at all. Works by Arp, Calder, Brancusi and Moore were, he pronounced, “all the sort of stuff I should like to keep out’’. As a result of his intervention, British customs would not let them into the country. In 1949 Peggy Guggenheim took herself and her collection to Venice, where she lived until her death in 1979.
Despite the pre-war setback Sir Norman Reid, who became director of the Tate in 1964, entertained hopes of persuading her to leave her collection to the gallery, and in 1965 she accompanied it to London for an exhibition. A formal dinner was held in her honour and she was wined and dined by the Establishment. By the beginning of 1966 Reid was confident enough of victory to inform his trustees that she had made a new will leaving her collection to the gallery.
There were other good reasons for his optimism. The Solomon Guggenheim who founded the Guggenheim Museum in New York, where Messer became director in 1961, was Peggy’s uncle (her father had gone down with the Titanic), but she had had a miserable childhood and felt stifled by all her wealthy relations. After leaving for Europe aged 22, she returned to the United States very rarely. In her autobiography she wrote disparagingly of the family museum, a reinforced concrete spiral designed by Frank Lloyd Wright, describing it as “a huge garage’’.
Yet at the same time that the Tate was raising its hopes, she was secretly negotiating with the Guggenheim. Her main requirement was that her collection should be kept together, preferably at the Palazzo Venier dei Leoni, her home on the Grand Canal which had opened to the public as a museum in 1951.
It was the diplomatic Messer who handled the gallery’s negotiations with Peggy, making many trips to Venice in the 1960s and 1970s. In 1969 he secured her agreement to an exhibition of a selection of Cubist, Surrealist and Abstract Expressionist works from her collection at the New York museum. The show was a huge success and she reportedly agreed to leave the museum her entire collection — only to change her mind a few months later, when she announced that she would be leaving it to the Commune of Venice.
Matters remained unresolved until 1976, during which time several factors played in Messer’s favour. In the early 1970s Peggy Guggenheim had paid $60,000 for a canvas which turned out to be a fake, a mistake she blamed on the Tate whose advice she had sought (though she bought the canvas before reading the Tate’s report). However, it was said that the Tate’s chances were finally scuppered when, on a trip to Britain, she was stopped at the border and informed that her beloved dogs would have to go into quarantine. Meanwhile, the offer to the Commune of Venice was withdrawn when she was presented with a bill for donor’s tax.
At the same time Messer’s mittel-European charm was having its effect on the ageing art connoisseur. “I once wrote her: ‘Why is it when I am with you, you are so nice and sweet and then I get such awful letters?’” he recalled. “Then for a while, she addressed her letters to ‘Dear Tom, Sweet Tom’.”
Messer claimed that in the end he really did become fond of the famously difficult old lady, “and the reason I did was she was eternally feminine”. Within days of her death in December 1979 he travelled to Venice to see about safeguarding her legacy, and in April the following year her collection officially reopened under the direction of the Solomon Guggenheim Museum, in a palazzo which had been almost completely swept clean of its former owner’s presence.
Messer’s victory over the Tate strengthened the Guggenheim’s holdings and gave the museum its first outpost outside the United States. Since then, the foundation has opened museums in Bilbao and Berlin, and is now planning a Guggenheim in Abu Dhabi.
Thomas Maria Messer was born in Bratislava, in what is now Slovakia, on February 9 1920. His father was an art historian and a professor of German; his mother came from a family of musicians.
Despite his artistic background, Thomas studied Chemistry, first in Prague and later at Thiel College in Pennsylvania. On September 2 1939 he had embarked at Liverpool on the Athenia, bound for Montreal. The next day Britain declared war on Germany, and within hours the Athenia had been torpedoed by a German U-boat. All but 119 of the 1,418 on board were rescued. Messer subsequently crossed over to America on another ship.
Messer soon abandoned chemistry for modern languages, studying at Boston University, and after America joined the war served in Europe as an interrogator for military intelligence. After the war he studied Art at the Sorbonne.
Returning to the United States, Messer took a master’s degree in Art History from Harvard. Before his appointment at the Guggenheim in 1961, he was director of the Institute of Contemporary Art in Boston.
He became director of the Guggenheim just two years after it had moved into its new Frank Lloyd Wright spiral building on Fifth Avenue. His predecessor, John Sweeney, had left after disagreements with the architect and the board, and when Messer arrived things were in disarray. As well as repairing relations with the board, he had to build a professional staff and find ways to overcome the practical difficulties of a building which Messer himself described as having “the circular geography of hell”, where any vertical object appeared tilted in a “drunken lurch”.
He took a huge risk in 1962 when he put on an exhibition of large sculptures from the Hirshhorn collection. But in fact he had taken the precaution of staging a smaller sculpture exhibition shortly after his arrival, when he discovered how to compensate for the building’s geometry by constructing special plinths at an angle, so that the pieces were not vertical yet appeared to be so. The result was considered a triumph.
Messer remained the gallery’s director for 27 years, during which time he greatly expanded the collection and established its international reputation. As well as the Peggy Guggenheim collection, in 1963 he persuaded the German collector Justin Thannhauser to present a significant portion of his collection, including dozens of Impressionist, Post Impressionist and early modern works, to the Guggenheim on permanent loan. The two men had become friends by chance in the 1950s when Thannhauser heard Messer playing Beethoven through the open windows of his apartment on 67th Street. When Thannhauser died in 1976, the paintings on loan became part of the Guggenheim’s permanent collection.
Thomas Messer’s wife, Remedios, died in 2002. There were no children.
Thomas Messer, born February 9 1920, died May 15 2013

Guardian:

Regarding your article (Flooding threatens £250bn worth of homes as cutbacks weaken defences, 18 May), it is worth noting that while around 500,000 properties in London are in the floodplain, over 80% of these are at low risk of flooding thanks to the world-class protection afforded by the Thames Barrier and its associated flood defences. We are spending over £20m this year maintaining and improving defences to ensure that homes and businesses in London continue to be well protected.
David Jordan
Director of operations, Environment Agency
• So Pope Francis has stated that atheists can be seen as good people if they do good (Report, 23 May). Perhaps the next great leap for the Vatican is to realise that Catholics who do evil are evil.
Dr Colin Bannon
Crapstone, Devon
• Terry Cook in St Albans just hasn’t looked in the right place for English asparagus (Letters, 21 May) It has been on sale for two weeks in a certain Italian deli. Next stop – the market … Better start saving up, though!
Jill Bennett
St Albans, Hertfordshire
• Perhaps Steve Bell should stop putting a condom on the prime minister and put one on the mayor of London (Public has a right to know about Johnson’s affair, 22 May).
Tony Cole
London
• Are civil servants or executives ever invited to appear before select committees, or is there a constitutional requirement that they be “hauled” (Letters, 23 May)?
D Stockley
Reigate, Surrey
• Has anyone ever been accused of displaying a roundhead attitude?
John Jepson
Driffield, East Yorkshire
• I disagree with Isabella Stone (Letters, 22 May); you should carry on with these letters until you have had literally hundreds of them.
Alex Harris
Surbiton, Surrey

Len McCluskey denies any “breach of party rules” over his union’s strategy in seeking to influence Labour party panel selections (Mandelson’s argument is about politics not procedure, 21 May). He insists: “Unite’s aim is simple – to recruit members to the party and then encourage them to endorse union-supported candidates in one-member, one-vote selections.”
But perhaps McCluskey forgets that the integrity of Labour’s modern constitution is underwritten in the 1997 election-winning manifesto, which affirmed: “We have changed the way we make policy, and put our relations with the trade unions on a modern footing where they accept they can get fairness but no favours from a Labour government. Our MPs are all now selected by ordinary party members, not small committees or pressure groups.”
It is also significant that this was the first party manifesto to have been pre-ratified, under OMOV, by its then record 400,000 members. At the same time, the party rule book was updated to ensure union affiliates agreed to “accept the programme, policy and principles of the party”. This same obligation was placed on individual members, together with new restrictions on the operation of “factions” within the party.
I am sure McCluskey well knows that these “procedures” were introduced in order to avoid a repeat of the Militant-style entryism which almost destroyed our party during the 80s. It is precisely for this reason that the behaviour of parties-within-a-party (surely) has to be subjected to the closest scrutiny. It is the prime responsibility of Labour’s ruling national executive committee to provide a strategic direction for the party as a whole. It is they who will now presumably decide what constitutional implications exist, if any, for McCluskey’s version of local bloc voting.
Mike Allott
Eastleigh, Hampshire
• Perhaps Progress should be flattered by Len McCluskey’s ongoing attention, but perspective is required. We understand it is daunting, difficult and time-consuming for people putting themselves forward for parliamentary selection, particularly when they don’t come from the political class of advisers or full-time union officials. That is why our work around selections, overseen by our elected strategy board, remains focused on helping members, trade unionists and councillors across the country to understand Labour’s complicated process.
With our annual budget, just a fraction of Unite’s political fund, I struggle to understand how Progress shining a spotlight on the process and opening opportunities up to grassroots members is so threatening for Len McCluskey. Progress prefers an open and inclusive approach. At our recent annual conference featuring Peter Mandelson, we also welcomed the contribution of Steve Hart, political director of Unite, in a breakout session focused on delivering more people from working-class and other under-represented backgrounds into parliament.
Wherever people sit in the broad church of the Labour party, our collective goal must be to help Ed Miliband transform Britain. The principle underpins Progress’s new Campaign for a Labour Majority and, whatever our other differences with Len McCluskey, I hope we can all unite around that.
Robert Philpot
Director, Progress

As a practising member of the criminal bar, I am horrified at the proposed changes to the provision of legal aid, currently undergoing a so called “consultation period” by the Ministry of Justice (Editorial, 22 May), albeit the justice minister refuses to meet the chairman of the Criminal Bar Association. It is clear that the truncated consultation period is no more than window dressing. Chris Grayling is disinterested in any contribution from the profession. It is beyond doubt that the tendering out of legal aid to private business will herald a decline in standards in a legal system that has been a model of justice for centuries. There is no provision whatsoever in the proposals to ensure standards are maintained when individuals are unable to choose their representation. Once in possession of a contract, a company’s clients will be guaranteed, irrespective of the quality of service. The idea that this service would be properly provided by employees of a profit-driven company, whose lowest bid has rewarded them with the responsibility for the representation of citizens accused of crime by the state, is dubious. The prospect that the same company could be responsible for housing prisoners, transporting them, and representing them is, frankly, Orwellian.
Rebecca Herbert
East Langton, Leicestershire
• You report dissidents in Iran “have been denied adequate legal representation” (22 May). In the UK we are a long way from Iran’s repressive regime, but the present government’s proposals on reforming legal aid to allow Eddie Stobart and the like to turn a profit by supplying third-rate representation to people who are (to use Grayling’s analysis) “too thick to know better”, will have us catching up with the regime in Tehran in no time. Whatever one’s view of defence lawyers, the importance of ensuring that only those proved to the satisfaction of their peers are found guilty, is a matter of social, democratic and constitutional importance to us all.
Ben Summers
Legal aid barrister, London

The savage killing of a British soldier in Woolwich has to be condemned without reservation by all Muslims (Report, 23 May). This murder fills us with revulsion, and our heartfelt condolences are extended to the victim’s family.
Last week, the British Muslim community was in the spotlight with the conviction of a child sex abuse gang in Oxford (Report, 15 May). This week, two misguided Muslims – new converts to Islam – have brought further opprobrium to practising Muslims. This terrible scourge of child abuse and terrorism within some strains of British Islam is sadly reflective of the broader incapacity of the Muslim community to fully integrate with the general mainstream. British Muslims must disassociate themselves from all variants of imported religious fundamentalism so that far-right organisations cannot exploit burgeoning social tensions in the UK.
However, there are underlying reasons behind the Woolwich brutality. There is a clear correlation between Tony Blair’s illegal invasion of Iraq and the emergence of Muslim terrorism in the UK. Before the UK embarked upon non-UN sanctioned intervention in the Middle East, there was no Muslim violent extremism here. This in no way condones the despicable deeds of two opportunistic converts to Islamic fundamentalism, but Labour’s former leaders must be held accountable for dragging this country into needless US-inspired foreign adventures. They are partly responsible for providing Muslim militants with their conveniently toxic propaganda. It is time that the UK addressed the roots of Islamic terrorism instead of focusing just on its contemptible results.
Dr T Hargey
Imam, Oxford Muslim Congregation
• Although it is too early to say whether the terrorists who killed the British soldier are nation-centric or al-Qaida-centric, there is no denying that lack of integration incubates both. Nation-centric groups (Kashmiri militants, Sikh separatists, etc) invoke religion as a mean to win public support, while al-Qaida-centric ones are driven by it. Both groups, however, kill innocent people to achieve their aim.
Britain is home to a large number of religious minorities, some of which are more fully integrated than others. Those who find integration painful tend to find solace in political radicalisation. Unless Britain places integration at the centre of its immigration policies, it is difficult to see how such radicalisation of religious minorities can possibly be pre-empted.
Randhir Singh Bains
Gants Hill, Essex
• As a long-time reader of the Guardian I have appreciated your position as the moderate, well-informed and liberalist alternative to the excesses and ignorance of many other newspaper offerings. However I must complain about your front page (23 May). The headline, “You people will never be safe”, may be an accurate quotation, it may be newsworthy and eyecatching, but it is also a shameful misuse of your influence in the current climate. You know the Islamophobia that is being used to justify hate crimes across the globe. This would have been an inappropriate front page for a tabloid; for the Guardian it is reprehensible. Read the comments it has prompted on social media networks – you have gravely offended your readers.
Dr Samantha Pegg
Senior lecturer, Law School, Nottingham Trent University
• Twenty years ago, also in south London, another man was stabbed to death for “what”, rather than who he was. No media nor public outrage immediately followed, nor did the full weight of the state swing so dramatically into action – quite the opposite, in fact, as the Stephen Lawrence inquiry was years later to document. Moreover, on the day of the killing in Woolwich, Julie Bindel called for an inquiry into why victims of domestic violence – two women a week killed in England and Wales – are not getting sufficient protection. None of these cases are direct equivalents – but the differential responses to each of them are, sadly, all too telling about state, institutional and societal priorities.
Steve Tombs
Professor of criminology, Faculty of Social Sciences, the Open University
• No amount of condemnation can hide the fact that in Woolwich the blood of the innocent was shed in the name of Allah. If Muslims want to live in the UK it is incumbent upon us to take responsibility for how the Qur’an is being interpreted and taught to British Muslims. Likewise, those of us who find it hard to reconcile with the British way of life have the choice of moving to the lands where sharia supposedly rules. But please, no more butchering of human beings in the name of Allah on British soil.
MA Qavi
London
• A soldier is murdered and our leaders react with “keep calm and carry on”. Carry on with the drone attacks which kill indiscriminately. Carry on with the collateral damage of criminal allied actions against wedding parties and families mistaken for insurgents. Carry on with the politically blind foreign policies that put us all in mortal danger. David Cameron has no intention of ending reckless militarism, but until he does, these atrocities will continue to threaten our nation.
Bruce Whitehead
Edinburgh
• Mohsin Hamid expressed the sentiments I have for years been urging my Muslim students to include in letters to editors (‘Islam is not a monolith’, G2, 20 May). I teach PR and journalism and continually stress the importance of standing up publicly for Islam. Hamid has done this beautifully. The radical fanatics who do so much damage are thankfully a minority, but how many Muslims are pointing this out? So far my students have regrettably been reluctant to champion their religion. Such silence contributes to the rise of Islamophobia. Only if more people follow Hamid’s example can there be any hope of Islam being regarded in a better light.
Jane Hammond
Rochester, Kent

Tim Radford (Lost in space, G2, 21 May) repeats the story that the astronomer royal, Sir Richard Woolley, had described space travel as “utter bilge”, implying a lack of vision on behalf of the British establishment. I met Woolley when he came to talk to Liverpool University’s Astronomical Society soon after the Apollo moon missions and asked him his views on space travel. He held to the same opinion, as he said he was talking about interstellar and intergalactic travel, which had been all the rage in science fiction circles in 1956. Given the enormous distances involved, the time for a journey could be measured in lifetimes, not years. To go to the moon is (only) a quarter of a million miles, whereas just writing down the distance to the stars would involve so many zeros that the editor would not allow this letter into the paper. Writing the distance to the furthest galaxies would require most of the paper to be filled with zeros. “Utter bilge” is a reasonable description of such flights of fancy.
Frank Large
Liverpool

Independent:

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The blood of the innocent shed in Woolwich calls for a high-level inquiry into how the Koran is being interpreted and taught in British mosques and madrassahs, and the links most of our mosques have with Saudi Arabia and Pakistan.
What happened in Woolwich is in line with what Salafi zealots have been doing in Syria and Pakistan to other Muslims who do not share their bleak view of the Creator.
M A Qavi, London SE3
 
Words struggle to describe the deep anger at this cowardly attack on our off-duty soldier. This has been an attack on every one of us and the nation stands united in its abhorrence and disgust.
But hard lessons need to be learnt about who knew of the radical ideology of these thugs. It is alleged that at least one of them was known for overtly jihadist views, so we need to know whether pre-emptive action could have been taken by the security agencies.
This attack has also exposed the blatant failure of the UK’s Muslim organisations and previous governments’ complacent attitude in cosying up to them. I have not seen any UK Muslim group or educational institution confront, in a structured and comprehensive manner, this pernicious anti-UK propaganda, rife among converts in social circles, schools, higher-education institutes, prisons, etc.
UK Muslim youth needs to be taught the fundamental democratic values of Britain and its core national ethos, together with patriotism. When it comes to the internal security of this country, every Muslim youth should be a soldier and a watchful guard.
And Muslim youth also needs to be taught that members of our armed forces heroically fulfill the tasks entrusted to them, and that foreign policy is an expression of our national interests, which can be changed through national consensus, civic efforts and legitimate lobbying.
Dr Lu’ayy Minwer Al-Rimawi, Co-Director, Master’s Programme in Islamic Financial & Business Law, BPP University College, London WC1
 
The savage killing of the soldier has to be condemned without reservation by all Muslims. This monstrous act fills us with utter revulsion, and our heartfelt condolences are extended to the victim’s family.
Last week, the British Muslim community was in the spotlight with the conviction of a sadistic Muslim paedophile gang in Oxford. This week, two misguided Muslims, most significantly new converts to Islam, have brought further opprobrium to practising Muslims in the UK.
These terrible scourges of paedophilia and terrorism within some strains of British Islam are sadly reflective of the broader incapacity of the Muslim community to fully integrate with the mainstream. If UK Muslims were genuine and effective stakeholders in British society, the ideological drivers that fuel immoral sexuality as well as bloody terrorism would be inhibited, if not eradicated.
British Muslims must disassociate themselves from all variants of imported religious fundamentalism so that fascist groups and far-right organisations cannot exploit burgeoning social tensions in the UK.
But there are also unpalatable, underlying reasons behind the Woolwich brutality. There is a clear correlation between Tony Blair’s illegal invasion of Iraq a decade ago and the emergence of Muslim terrorism in the UK. This in no way condones this despicable deed, but Labour’s former leaders must be held accountable for dragging this country into needless, US-inspired foreign adventures.
They are partly responsible for providing Muslim militants, here and abroad, with their toxic propaganda. It is high time that the UK honestly addresses the roots of Islamic terrorism instead of focusing just on its contemptible results.
Dr T Hargey, Imam, Oxford Muslim Congregation, Oxford
 
There appears to be confusion among the British Muslim communities over the horrific episode in Woolwich. A segment of the British Muslim communities suggests that Muslims ought not to show their feelings of disgust about this cowardly attack.
They believe such outward expression of condemnation amounts to apologising and could be viewed as acceptance that it is Islam that preaches such acts of violence.
I suggest an alternative view to the community to which I belong. Any public condemnation of this or similar acts only highlights the feelings of solidarity British Muslims hold with the victims and is a show of defiance to the radical ideologists who try to hijack their religion to further their agenda of hatred and division.
Muslims and non-Muslims alike should stand shoulder to shoulder in sending such unified messages to the preachers and perpetrators of hate within our communities.
Dr Shaaz Mahboob, Uxbridge, Middlesex
 
I am a teacher at an Islamic faith school in Birmingham and involved in a local neighbourhood forum. I felt compelled to write to you to plead that you give us (the Muslim community) a voice to utterly condemn this horrific event.
Please help us to give a loud, clear and unequivocal response to this criminal act. This is an act of madmen: nothing in this can be associated with Islam.
We Muslims need to reassure our fellow British citizens that we stand with them against all forms of extremism, terrorism and acts of treason.
Kashif May, Head of RE and Behaviour, Al-Furqan Community College, Birmingham
 
Gay marriage law unfair to single people
The special concessions given to homosexuals are extremely unfair. Marriage and civil partnership give people the right to transfer property between them without inheritance tax and to draw on the spouse’s pension entitlements.
Why should these benefits be denied to single people, now the majority of the population? What is so special about homosexual sex that it qualifies for exemption from tax and extra pension benefits?
Many people share their lives with others but cannot marry them. Sisters who live together, relatives who may be dependent on each other, people in complex relationships which preclude marriage; all of these people would very much like the privileges which are being accorded to homosexuals.
If gays are to get these tax breaks, then everyone in society should be able to gift their property freely to someone they love.
But the liberal elite have made gay marriage a badge of their international club membership. If someone in the Netherlands does it, then so must Obama, Cameron and their pals. It’s infuriating and deeply unjust.
Heterosexual married couples are raising the next generation. It’s a tough job and I accept that they deserve support from the state. But anyone can have sex; you don’t have to be given tax breaks to get that together.
Jane Hayter-Hames, Oxford
 
Opponents of gay marriage, with Biblical backing, claim it will devalue straight marriage. What I and my partner want to know is: could gay marriage devalue civil partnership?
Peter Forster, London N4
 
GPs let down my dying mother
How I sympathise with Jane Merrick (“I wish my child hadn’t got ill at the weekend”, 22 May). My mother died last year having been seen by four doctors at her own practice, all of them missing the cancer that was widespread through her body and killed her a few days after I had no choice but to take her to A&E.
Her own doctor, writing to me weeks after I had sent him a letter outlining my disappointment and anger, said: “I have not been involved in your mother’s care from the beginning as she was seen by other doctors in the practice.” Point made.
 
Name and address supplied
If police, ambulance and firefighters can all work nightshifts and weekends, why can’t all the vastly higher-paid GPs?
Dai Woosnam, Grimsby
 
Many fear a frugal retirement
I’m delighted for Carolyn Slater, reading her IEA reports in Tuscany (letters, 21 May). Personally, I would choose France over Italy, but I have no doubt that retirement for her is wonderful, and that there are many such people around who, either as the result of a great company pension fund, thoughtful property purchase, or constant prudence in their financial affairs, succeed in having the retirement they planned and worked for at an age where they can appreciate it.
But I’m certain there are also very many others looking at a frugal retirement where they must work beyond the age they wish, due a poorly performing, or non-existent, pension fund. They will consider themselves lucky to have paid the mortgage off on their (average) property by the time they receive their (fixed) state pension, hopefully at 65 or 67 but who knows, with the proposed five-yearly review, possibly at 70. There will be more again who won’t manage even that.
Both quantity (in terms of time) and quality (financial comfort) are important for a happy retirement. Perhaps, in repeatedly raising the age at which the state pension becomes payable, governments have in mind that some of us won’t be around to draw it. Now, there’s a good way to pay off the deficit.
Lesley Wilson, Pontypridd, South Wales
 
No bribery
Your article “BBC offers staff £24m ‘bribes’ for move to Salford” (15 May) implied that the BBC had offered “bribes” to staff to induce them to move to the North of England. Staff were not “bribed” to move and at no point did the National Audit Office say that the BBC had done anything improper in terms of the relocation packages offered to staff.
Peter Salmon, Director, BBC North, Salford
 
It’s just Chance
What qualifies the Chancellor of the Exchequer to be in charge of environmental and energy policy (“Switch to low-carbon future”, 23 May)? For that matter, what qualifies someone with no background in economics or finance to be Chancellor of the Exchequer?
David Gibbs, London SW4

Times:

In the age of the phone camera and cyberspace every citizen caught up in a drama, horrific or otherwise, becomes a journalist
Sir, The Woolwich attack (reports, May 23) was undoubtedly terrifying. But it’s still very unclear whether it was carried out by ideologically inspired “terrorists” or by mentally disturbed individuals. Moreover, the impact of the attack is greatly heightened by the intensive rolling 24-hour news coverage and the urgent tones in which news reports are delivered, and by the PM’s decision to clear his diary and convene Cobra. So much for the old mantra about “life going on as normal” in the face of such events.
John McIntosh
Dundee
Sir, Two aspiring terrorists butcher an innocent man in London in broad daylight and then wait around for the police to turn up, encouraging witnesses to photograph them.
They appear on mainstream TV news covered in blood and wielding knives providing coverage that will doubtless be seen around the world.
The British Prime Minister cuts short a visit with the French President to fly home to manage the crisis.
Terrorists 2, Great Britain 0.
Derek Smith
Amersham, Bucks
Sir, The slaughter of a British soldier in Woolwich was barbaric, but it was also news: shocking and revolting, but news nonetheless. Which makes the criticisms from some quarters over newspapers and broadcasters carrying the images of the crime and its crowing perpetrators all the more wrong-headed.
In the age of the phone camera and cyberspace every citizen caught up in a drama, horrific or otherwise, becomes a journalist. Self-censorship by the mainstream media becomes futile too and it is increasingly unrealistic in the era of social media.
Whatever the answers to the many questions this incident raises, failing to publish the terrible truth would be counter-productive — just as it would be wrong, in our shock, grief and anger, to fail to celebrate those courageous women who confronted the attackers and went to help their victim. Ultimately this terrible story reflects both the horror of fanatical hatred and the ordinary people of Woolwich as citizen heroes.
Paul Connew
Media consultant, St Albans
Sir, This incident proves that there is no let-up in the radicalisation of British Muslims. The murder reflects a huge policy failure on the part of successive governments to harness Britain’s growing religious diversity to its core Christian identity. In addition to mosques and temples, non-English-speaking Muslim and Sikh radio and TV channels now contribute to consolidating parallel communal identities.
Randhir Singh Bains
Gants Hill, Essex
Sir, Whether or not foreign policy is a cause of sectarian division in the UK, British forces have come to the aid of Muslims in Kuwait, Bosnia and Kosovo. This is generally not known or appreciated by the Muslim community in the UK because of the failure of successive governments to understand the importance of making this widely known among our Muslim neighbours.
Lord Kilclooney
House of Lords

After years of lawful assisted dying in other jurisdictions, why should we not consider this choice of approach in England and Wales?
Sir, In your leading article (May 18) you provided two reasons for opposing a change in the law to allow assisted suicide. The first was that it might lead to an increase in assisted suicides, and the second, that it might also lead to an increase in the number of prosecutions for assisting suicide.
In Oregon, after 15 years of lawful assisted dying, the incidence of assisted dying deaths has only increased from 0.2 per cent to 0.3 per cent of annual deaths, and during that period there has not been a single prosecution. Lord Falconer of Thoroton’s Bill, which is the subject of your editorial, is based on the Oregon legislation, but with even more safeguards to protect vulnerable members of society.
Why do you think that the experience in England and Wales will be so different from that in Oregon?
Lord Joffe
House of Lords
Sir, For several years The Times has expressed an enlightened view on a change in the law on assisted dying. But on Saturday it defended the status quo (“Death and the Law”). I am at a loss to know what has changed. Dying Britons are still travelling abroad to die, some are taking their lives at home in the UK, others are helped to die illegally by doctors and, of course, there are many who are forced to suffer against their wishes to the bitter end.
In the meantime other jurisdictions, the most recent being Vermont, change their laws to allow assisted dying within safeguards. Other states and countries have legalised assisted dying without fulfilling any of the dire predictions opponents to change have raised. What suddenly makes Britain uniquely ill equipped to provide such a choice?
Sir Patrick Stewart
London SE16

Renaming Vehicle Excise Duty would alter the misconception that drivers of motor vehicles pay a ‘road tax’, while cyclists do not
Sir, Many drivers are under the misconception that Vehicle Excise Duty (VED) is a “road tax” (report, May 22), and some use this as an excuse for bullying and aggression towards other road users, notably cyclists. Perhaps the Treasury should rename VED “Pollution Tax”. This would remove the misguided idea that only motorists pay for the upkeep of roads but also make it clear that we vehicle owners are being taxed for the environmental damage our vehicles cause.
Rob McIvor
London SE13

When quoting from the Bible on the evils of excessive wealth, it is important to refer to the original version in its full form
Sir, Carol Midgley (Times2, May 23) claims that “money is the root of all evil”. No. “The love of money is a root of all kinds of evil” (1 Timothy vi, 10).
Quite a difference.
Jill Hackett
Flackwell Heath, Bucks

Leaving everything to nature is a luxury we cannot afford — however, we should not release millions of farmed pheasants into the wild
Sir, Lindsey Waddell, Chairman of the Gamekeepers’ Organisation (letter, May 22), is quite right in pointing out that many of “the factors that drove these subtle but substantive predator/prey relationships have broken down”. But this is not an argument for exterminating the increasingly rare predators, but surely a very rational argument for curtailing the release of an estimated 35 million pheasants and 6 million red-legged partridges into the wild every year.
Pheasants in particular are serious predators themselves, destroying countless larger invertebrates as well as lizards, slow-worms, frogs and even small snakes and other wildlife. I agree with Mr Waddell that leaving everything to nature is a luxury we cannot afford, but neither can nature afford to have millions of farmed pheasants dumped on her by gamekeepers every year.
John A. Burton
CEO, World Land Trust, and Visiting Fellow, University of East Anglia

Telegraph:

SIR – Banning the use of olive oil in stoppered bottles or in bowls for dipping has nothing to do with protecting the consumer (Letters, May 21), and everything to do with taking away our choice.
Any consumer with a half a palate should be able to tell if the oil is any good; they will also know that the lower end of the restaurant market is likely to have inferior quality oil. If consumers don’t like the taste, they don’t have to have it.
This directive will make restaurants send out salads already dressed, and they won’t offer bread and olive oil.
Marcia MacLeod
London NW6
SIR – The obvious reaction to this ridiculous ruling is to do as the French do: accept the directive and then ignore it.
However, we will, no doubt, complain about the stupidity of it, and then go on to enforce it ferociously.
A D Dunster
Bournemouth, Dorset
SIR – When I start to take my own olive oil to a restaurant, will I be charged corkage?
David Sisson
Huddersfield, West Yorkshire
SIR – What will happen to the hundreds of millions of restaurant olive-oil dispensers that will be rendered useless by this new EU law?
We need to reinvent a use for these elegant glass jugs, retro-style decanters or snazzy modern dispensers to avoid a tidal wave of redundant glass.
Mike Hughes
Wokingham, Berkshire

SIR – On the Today programme yesterday, David Cameron stated that the Tories would listen to what the British people say, and act accordingly. Perhaps this is actually at the root of the problems besetting the major parties.
If parties are solely concerned with seeking and retaining power by constantly changing their policies to match the views of the day, we might as well discard party politics and have a non-elected organisation that governs to public opinion derived from sample analysis.
Surely the better way to achieve power is for a party to say: “We believe in X, Y and Z, join us if you agree.” People react more warmly to clear, decisive policies that make one party stand out from another.
This might explain the recent rise in the popularity of Ukip, which, if it had a group of leaders perceived by the public to be credible politicians, could have ripped the hearts out of the Tories and Labour by now.
Nicholas Hopson-Hill
Stockbridge, Hampshire
Related Articles
Fears for the future of bread dipped in olive oil
23 May 2013
SIR – In March 2010, the Council of Europe agreed a recommendation on measures to combat discrimination on grounds of sexual orientation or gender identity, to be implemented by June 2013.
Gay marriage was guided through by Lynne Featherstone (then a Lib Dem equalities minister) when Britain took the chairmanship of the council in 2011, and aided by Sir Nicolas Bratza, then head of the European Court of Human Rights.
So presumably Mr Cameron’s motivation to pursue the same-sex marriage Bill is not down to his own conviction that it is good for the institution of marriage and the raising of children in a family unit, but rather his desire to maintain the Coalition, and to prevent further damaging press coverage about Europe’s interference in the lives of people in this country.
Can these be described as good reasons for alienating a substantial percentage of his own party?
Jeremy Tozer
Sonning Common, Oxfordshire
SIR – We should be ashamed of the Tories who are protesting against gay social rights. We are a nation that pioneered democracy, and now some of us are behaving like the worst extremist regimes in the world. One might as well make a law against blondes, white-van men, or musicians, or another arbitrary section of the community.
Some of our most outstanding citizens who have contributed most to our culture and civilization have been gay. Why should they not be able to marry in church if they are Christian?
Elizabeth Davies
Papworth Everard, Cambridgeshire
SIR – David Skelton (telegraph.co.uk, May 21) is incorrect to call homosexual marriage “equal marriage”.
There is nothing equal about it if it does not contain definitions of adultery or consummation.
A C Allen
Whitchurch, Shropshire
Scottish subsidy
SIR – Alex Salmond, the Scottish First Minister, has claimed that Scotland will be better off independent.
Is it not time that David Cameron advised him that, with independence, the Barnett formula, whereby up to £11 billion per year is pumped into Scotland’s economy, will cease to apply?
This payment means that £1,600 more can be spent on every man, woman and child living in Scotland than is spent in England, and enables the Scots to enjoy a better hospital service, free prescriptions and free tuition for Scottish universities, among other benefits.
Alternatively, scrap the formula now and let Scotland share the experience of the 56 million living in England before going to cast their vote in the referendum.
Ron Mason
East Grinstead, West Sussex
SIR – Why has the question of who is eligible to vote in the Scottish referendum not been properly addressed? Why is it that only the Scots can determine whether the United Kingdom remains whole? Are those of us living south of the border deemed to be unworthy of deciding on the future of our country? The whole of Sudan got a say in whether South Sudan should become an independent nation, yet only a minority of the population of the United Kingdom are afforded the same dignity.
Simon Major
Llandyrnog, Denbighshire
Hideous housing
SIR – I was astounded to read that Michael Gove, the Education Secretary (report, May 17) thinks the beauty of the countryside can be improved by building new houses.
It is nonsense to compare modern housing to Chatsworth or Salisbury Cathedral. If modern housing was really something “to ravish the eye and lift up the soul”, and was placed sensitively in villages, we could agree with him. But we all know that it will be packed into new housing estates that have no community spirit, where neighbour knows not neighbour.
John Doyle
Warehorne, Kent
SIR – The Coalition seems to have stumbled about in the dark when it comes to planning, on the one hand giving more power to communities to shape their environment and, on the other, labelling them Nimbys when they reject unsustainable development in the countryside. Perhaps it should consult Gordon Brown on the merits of eco towns?
Stephen Collins
Woodmansgreen, West Sussex
England at its best
SIR – Regarding “An English garden – so where are the turbines?” (Letters, May 21), Sarah Johnson should have been in the car with my husband and me yesterday.
Having lived in this beautiful corner of Somerset for nearly 30 years, we still manage to get lost in the narrow, deserted lanes not 10 minutes from our house. The apple blossom was magnificent.
The English idyll is alive and well.
Sally Greenhalgh
Ditcheat, Somerset
That sinking feeling
SIR – On boarding our cruise ship recently we were surprised that the background music on the PA was the theme from Titanic (Letters, May 21). Thankfully, it was not followed by the theme from The Poseidon Adventure.
Jeremy Smyth
Spalding, Lincolnshire
London-centric HS2
SIR – Your leading article (May 18) asserts that regional towns and cities are “floundering in London’s wake”, and supports the building of the High Speed 2 project as a means of rectifying this. Unfortunately, the proposed sequence and timescales of construction will do little to change this.
Construction will begin in London with no certainty about the route north of Birmingham. It is set to take 20 years to reach Leeds and Manchester. Will it be cancelled north of Birmingham, just as regional Eurostar trains were? Neither Leeds nor Manchester will have high-speed links to anywhere further north, so they will continue to flounder in London’s wake.
I would be prepared to believe that HS2 is intended to benefit all of Great Britain were the first phases to be an electrified line from Leeds to Northallerton and a cross-city line at Manchester, with the next phase being a high-speed line from Leeds to Birmingham. These would improve links from Scotland to the Midlands and from north-east England to every large English and Welsh conurbation except London. Sadly, this will not happen.
The actual proposal appears to be intended only to enlarge the London commuter belt.
Damian Bell
Gateshead, Tyne and Wear
Dogs, cows and walkers
SIR – Having your dog on a lead is no protection from cow attacks (Letters, May 21) – rather the reverse. The cow will associate the human with the dog threat, and attack the creature which has no teeth. I know people who are lucky to be alive after this has happened to them.
Farmers in Somerset have modified their advice to walkers, telling them to release their dogs if attacked, although by then it may be too late. Ideally farmers should separate suckler herds from footpaths, by a temporary or permanent fence.
Madeline Helps
Bath, Somerset
To have and to hold
SIR – When we were in Lucca, for our silver wedding anniversary, an elderly nun spoke to my wife and me in Italian, which neither of us understood. After an amusing attempt at sign language, it became apparent what she was saying: “How nice it is to see a couple as old as you still holding hands!” (Features, May 21).
Noel Radcliffe
Tarvin, Cheshire
Neighbours who owe their lives to local firemen
SIR – Greg Morris (Letters, May 20) is right, fires do not only happen from 9am to 5pm, and it is the local, usually voluntary, fire service that is the lifeline.
Last year, what started as a garage fire in the early hours quickly engulfed our block of flats, where we were all asleep and unaware of the drama unfolding. Someone sounded the alert, and that brought fire brigades from three counties.
Were it not for our local fire station, my neighbours and I would not be alive.
Linda Bos
Midhurst, West Sussex
SIR – Jack Warden (Letters, May 20) believes substantial savings would be made if there was one national fire service.
However, anyone who has studied amalgamations in public service knows that larger organisations are more costly to operate than a number of smaller ones. Any savings that it is claimed will result are usually illusory.
For example, combining the brigades of Devon and Somerset has failed to deliver any benefit.
Paul Hornby
Oxford

Irish Times:

Sir, – Every suggestion at Seanad reform seems to rely on some undemocratic mechanism suggested out of genuinely good motives.
An Irish resident who doesn’t pay tax here but attended a particular university can vote. A person, in particular an elderly person, who didn’t have the financial means to attend university yet has worked, lived and paid taxes in Ireland is denied a vote. More bizarrely, an Irish person who attended a prestigious non- Irish university such as MIT is denied a basic democratic right. And all of those who are enfranchised with university votes have their votes watered down by the complex and undemocratic way that other senators are picked.
There are many fine people in the Seanad, some of whom have made great contributions to debates. But because of the undemocratic nature of the institution, these debates rank alongside bar-stool debates. The best reason for allowing a referendum on Seanad existence is that it will be the Seanad’s only brush with true democracy. Financial savings are a bonus. – Yours, etc,
TOM NEVILLE,
Leopardstown Avenue,
Blackrock, Co Dublin.
Sir, – We reject the characterisation by Paschal Donohue TD (Opinion, May 23rd) of those who are opposed to the abolition of Seanad Éireann as “political insiders” and “establishment” figures. We are a non-political group of barristers, solicitors, academics and law students who are opposed to abolition on the grounds that reform of the second chamber would create more democracy not less.
We note that Deputy Donohue justifies abolition on the grounds of cost. We wish to point out that the total annual cost of Senators’ salaries is €4.1 million. This compares to €3.4 million for Ministerial advisers. This comparison shows just how trite the cost argument is. Deputy Donohue should consider the detailed proposals for halving Senators’ salaries in the Seanad Bill 2013.
Deputy Donohue also justifies abolition on the grounds that the existing Seanad has failed to block government action. We wish to point out that the value of a second chamber is shown every time the government adopts an amendment proposed in the Seanad. Deputy Donohue showed the value of this when as an opposition Senator he proposed amendments to legislation, for example the Dublin Transport Authority Bill 2008, which were accepted by the government.
It is unfortunate that Deputy Donohue did not address the proposed reforms of the Seanad in any way in his article, particularly when the Government did not oppose the Seanad Bill 2013 last week. – Yours, etc,
DARREN LEHANE BL &
SUZANNE EGAN

A chara, – Dr Marie Clarke’s assertion (Leftfield, May 21st) that the Higher Education Authority has set out a “centralised and technically based proposal to distribute educational and research activity among institutions to replace existing systems of research activity” has no basis in fact.
The HEA, in implementing the Government’s strategy for higher education, is working towards the creation of a more coherent system where the contribution of each institution according to its mission will be co-ordinated to achieve high-quality outcomes. As part of that process the higher education institutions will, as requested by the HEA, set out their institutional mission. They will do so by reference to current strengths and the history and traditions of the institution. There is no prospect of the HEA determining the mission of an institution or distributing educational and research activity as Dr Clarke believes.
With autonomy, however, comes accountability and it is important that institutions, in the performance of their mission, contribute to achieving national policy objectives, social and economic. It is also important there is a high level of collaboration across the institutions, the more effectively to deliver on those objectives. – Is mise,
MALCOLM BYRNE,

Sir, – My eyes widened when they first saw “North Atlantic Isles” over a letter from Dermot C Clarke (May 18th).
At the recent “Irish Day” on the London Stock Exchange I gave a brief outline of just such an idea in the group discussions that took place following the opening ceremonies. Call it the “North Atlantic Isles” or the “North Atlantic Corridor”, it is all the same.
The islands of Ireland, Britain, Isle of Man, the Faroes, over to Iceland and then to Greenland (under home rule from Denmark) could be an interesting economic bloc.
The “Real Map of Ireland” shows Ireland’s marine territory of more than 220 million acres, which is 10 times the size of the island of Ireland. The Northern Corridor or North Atlantic Isles is Europe’s last frontier, potentially rich in oil, gas and food in the fisheries. What is more, Ireland has two of the best warm water ports servicing the Northern corridor in Shannon and Derry.
Just as important as the riches in natural resources, a grouping of Northern isles that choose to, could have their own currency and monetary policies not dominated by the economic and cultures of central Europe. – Yours, etc,
EMMETT O’CONNELL,

Sir, – The sickening killing in Woolwich (Front page, May 23rd) is wrong; and our thoughts are with the victim’s family.
Such acts are incompatible with Islam. The invasion of Iraq and Afghanistan, the drone attacks on Pakistan and other colonial interventions were eventually going to lead to such acts, but Bush and Blair decided to ignore that.  Instead of preventing terrorism, these wars caused more terrorism.
It is pathetic that the racist opportunist thugs of the EDL and the BNP will use the loss of a life to justify more hatred and violence. – Yours, etc,
MOHAMMED SAMAANA,
Upper Newtownards Road,
Belfast.

Irish Independent:

23 May 2013
* Sir, I want to congratulate Seamus Coffey on his article on austerity (Irish Independent, May 21).
Also in this section
Casting the first stone?
State ‘jobs for the boys’ policy benefits us all
Let’s carry Donal’s message in our hearts
In his article, he tells us the simple fact that ‘we are spending more money on government services for ourselves than we are collecting in tax revenue from ourselves’.
A bandwagon has being going for some time in which too many in politics and the media have been saying that austerity is not necessary and/or is not working.
Seamus Coffey assures us that austerity is both necessary and working and he gives us the figures to prove it.
He tells us that in the last five years the cumulative budget deficits added up to nearly €120bn (over 90pc of GNP) and the rescue of the Irish banking system contributed around €40bn to this.
In 2009, the deficit on providing government services was more than €15bn.
This year, as a result of austerity, it will be €4bn.
The truth is that, as a result of past mistakes, the present austerity is unavoidable.
Seamus Coffey has done us all a service by telling us the story in understandable figures.
A Leavy
Shielmartin Drive, Sutton, Dublin 13
ARROGANCE OF BRUTON
* I am writing concerning John Bruton’s lecture on ‘frugality’. I find the arrogance of the man breathtaking considering his vast income and pensions.
The only thing I find “immoral” is that “retired” politicians and senior civil servants are allowed to work full-time and continue to draw pensions from their previous employment.
Why does John Bruton suggest that pensioners and people on low-incomes be further penalised?
Liam Mac Cionnaith
Co Luiminigh
A FRIEND PLANTS A SEED
* “Still cold enough for month of May and growth sluggish,” I remarked to a casual acquaintance on entering the newsagents last evening. “Except for dandelions,” he replied. “The roadsides, fields and lawns of the country are covered with them.”
How right he was! So prolific was the dandelion crop around my holding that on the following day I went to the garden centre for a spray remedy. Rather than encourage my custom, the merchant half muttered: “Aren’t dandelions like ‘golden flowers from heaven’ compared to the cold wet barren sight that was our lot for the past months?” Once more I had to agree, while deciding it was time I did a little research on dandelions.
The common dandelion is a perennial yellow flowering herbaceous plant. After flowers have gone, fruits form and open up with the seeds inside attached to little bristles that travel large distances in wind. Bees and butterflies are attracted to the yellow flower and help pollinate them. Deer and rabbits feed off the leaves and certain birds such as goldfinches eat the seeds.
Herbalists view the common dandelion as a valuable herb because of its medicinal and culinary uses. It is used by children in play, but despised by gardeners because they overcrowd crops.
Its food value in salads, soups, winemaking and green tea are well known, but the medicinal value of the dandelion is vast. It is used to treat everything from stomach problems, gallstones, joint pains and eczema to being recommended as skin toner, blood tonic, aid to viral infection and in cancer treatment.
Nature provides us with many blessings – if only we had the eyes to see.
James Gleeson
Thurles, Co Tipperary
EDUCATION ON SUICIDE
* According to the article in your newspaper ‘Suicide risk for men under 21 is four times higher’, (May 21) Prof Kevin Malone, author of a report on suicide, “says Irish youths have the fourth highest suicide rate in Europe, and the numbers taking their own lives is rising”.
Why is there such a discrepancy in the rates of suicide between men and women?
From a young age, boys are taught not to cry. Such shows of emotion as fear, timidity or sadness are frowned upon. Boys learn, both consciously and unconsciously, to suppress their emotions. For girls, such expressions of emotion are encouraged and girls consequently feel more comfortable with their emotions and with expressing them.
The teenage years are difficult at the best of times. Children move away from the security of their parents and begin the tentative steps of forming their own independent personalities.
Their interests, their values, even their sexuality can all be in the mix. Coupled with this, in their late teens they do what’s commonly regarded as the most difficult exam they will ever do in their lives, while trying to figure out what career they will follow.
No wonder some teenagers fall through the cracks. Many feel unable to articulate their difficulties or reach out for help. By the time these boys become young adults, the die is cast.
A lifetime of “programming” can be very difficult to overcome.
When a crisis occurs they feel unable to cope and suicide unfortunately is looked at as an option. However, there is hope.
According to the report “existing suicide intervention and prevention programmes may be missing the boat by not focusing on school-age young people”. I agree. Education can play a huge part.
I believe resources should be put into organisations like Positive Mental Health here in Galway, with whom I am a volunteer. We deliver modules to transition-year students on all aspects of mental health, from bullying to relationships to peer pressure – aspects of a young person’s life that are just as important as getting good grades in the Leaving Cert. Positive strategies to help people who are experiencing difficulties are an integral part of the modules we deliver.
Everyone takes the emotional well-being of young people for granted, but the recent suicides of young people show us we do this at our peril.
Thomas Roddy
Salthill, Co Galway
COST OF CROMWELL MAPS
* I was interested to read in an Irish Independent article that Trinity College Dublin has launched the entire Cromwellian map collection of Ireland, made shortly after Oliver Cromwell’s successful conquest of Ireland, available online for the first time. Thirty-two counties, 240 baronies, 2,000+ parishes and 62,000 townlands. http://downsurvey.tcd.ie.
TCD associate professor of modern history Dr Michael O Siochru said of it: “Some of the maps are in magnificent condition, beautifully coloured and engraved. They are beautiful works of art and it’s the first time in 300 years that this collection has been back together.”
It is believed to be the first time in world history that a country had been mapped in such detail in ‘The Down Survey’, conducted between 1655 and 1658 and supervised by William Petty, surgeon general in Cromwell’s army. Ireland’s population was then estimated at 200,000. It seems a small number and can’t be known for certain.
Astonishing too, when one considers that 200 years later it had exploded to more than six million by the Great Famine in 1845.
One can view on the TCD Down Survey website a Cromwellian map of a region of the country with a Google map and satellite image of today below it.
There was a human cost which lies behind the creation of these ‘beautiful’ maps. Irish people were evicted in their tens of thousands from their homes, lands and properties and shipped in large numbers as slave labour to new English colonies overseas in the Caribbean and the few early colonies in the US.
Let us admire the Cromwellian maps, but also remember the Irish people taken, never to return.
M Sullivan
College Road, Co Cork
Irish Independent



Sun and rain

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Sun and rain 25th May 2013

I trot round the park today and listen to the Navy lark. I Oh dear, oh dear
Admiralty are having a secret meeting to discuss how to keep Troutbridge out of the fleet exercises. All the Admirals get to do their party pieces,in the end they decide to tell her nothing. So all theo other ships steal off in the night leaving Troutbridge all alone. Priceless.
A quiet day off sun hang out the washing rain bring in the washing sun rain sun rain. Off out to post a book sun rain sun rain, my gooodness
Mary wins at Scrabble today, just and gets just over 400, I might get my revenge tomorrow, I hope.

Obituary:

Alistair Campsie
Alistair Campsie, who has died aged 84, was a former officer in the Colonial Service in Africa and became a writer and hotelier in Scotland; but he was best known for his controversial views on the art and history of the bagpipe.

Alistair Campsie 
6:23PM BST 24 May 2013
As two of the main characteristics of the instrument are the continuity of sound and the absence of any means of varying the volume, south of the border many might suggest that the best way to play the instrument is with a pocket knife. Yet debates about correct method and the traditions of playing arouse great passions in Scotland.
Campsie’s problems with the piping establishment began in 1980, when he published The MacCrimmon Legend: the Madness of Angus MacKay, in which he challenged one of piping’s most cherished legends.
The MacCrimmons, who lived on the Isle of Skye, were, according to the tale, a family of hereditary pipers who originated piobaireachd, the classical pipe music of the Highlands.
Celebrated in verse by Sir Walter Scott, the MacCrimmons are honoured in the form of a cairn overlooking Loch Dunvegan, erected in 1933 and paid for by clan societies around the world. In translation the Gaelic inscription reads: “The Memorial Cairn of the MacCrimmons, of whom 10 generations were the hereditary pipers of MacLeod and who were renowned as Composers, Performers and Instructors of the classical music of the bagpipe. Near to this post stood the MacCrimmons’ School of Music, 1500–1800”.
Campsie argued that the legend was a hoax and attempted to show that almost all the “MacCrimmon” piobaireachd pieces had in fact been appropriated from elsewhere. Even the famous MacCrimmon’s Lament , supposedly composed by Donald Ban MacCrimmon during the 1745 Jacobite rebellion, Campsie argued, was stolen from the victims of the Clearances, who sang We Shall Return No More as they waited for the boats to take them from their native land.
In particular, Campsie investigated Angus MacKay (1812-59), Queen Victoria’s first piper, whose name appears on a collection of piobaireachd (which until then had mostly been passed on through oral tradition) published in 1838. According to Campsie the “self-appointed piping Establishment” had claimed that “Angus MacKay’s father, John, had been taught by the MacCrimmons and had handed on their music unchanged to Angus…”
Yet the MacCrimmon propagandists, Campsie maintained, had concealed the truth that MacKay was probably clinically insane from the age of 20, long before most of his work was written, and was dragged off to Bedlam after an indiscretion at Windsor Castle involving the Queen when he was raging drunk with “ardent spirits” at Christmas, 1853; he was certified insane in 1854.
Though he was later diagnosed as “the most violent patient in England”, MacKay’s deranged musical settings, Campsie alleged, had been accepted in piping circles as piobaireachd Holy Writ. “The Establishment, headed by two minor lairds who were also judges, then corruptly forced pipers to play Angus’s disturbed versions. Those who refused… were fraudulently denied their rightful gold medals, clasps and cups at historic Highland gatherings, in the process killing off the traditional settings of the music.”
The book caused outrage. The Piping Times, the monthly bible for enthusiasts which had always supported the MacCrimmon Legend, launched a blistering attack on the author, its fury buttressed by some obvious errors in the book. Campsie claimed that someone had tampered with the manuscript in order to bring him and the book into disrepute and later appealed to libraries to insert corrections.
According to Campsie’s obituary in The Scotsman, the book “led to years of mutual tirades and even legal battles”. On his website Campsie claimed that he and his family “were made homeless, my writing career was ruined, and I was hounded into a heart attack from which no one knew how I recovered. I was told the next could be terminal.”
Alistair Keith Campsie was born in Inverness on January 27 1929. His father played lead violin in the Scottish Orchestra (now the Scottish National Orchestra) but, finding it hard to make ends meet, moved his family to England, where he supplemented his income from music by working as a painter and decorator. After the Second World War, they moved back to Lanark.
Alistair attended Lanark Grammar School and went on to study at the West of Scotland College of Agriculture in Ayr. In 1949, aged 20, he joined the Colonial Service and was posted to Sudan, and later Nigeria, to oversee agricultural projects. He always enjoyed writing, and created and edited the East African Farmer and Planter, the first magazine published in English and Swahili.
Later, after spells as a stringer for British newspapers in Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania and Zanzibar, he returned to Scotland to work for the Weekly Scotsman, and later for the Scottish Daily Mail and the Scottish Daily Express in Glasgow. When, during an interview with Cary Grant, the actor told him about the self-hypnosis technique he had used to give up smoking, Campsie, a heavy smoker, tried it himself. It worked and he later turned the experience into a book, Cary Grant Stopped Me Smoking (1991).
After his retirement, in 1974 Campsie and his wife bought a former coaching inn at Barr, Ayrshire. Five years later they bought a hotel in Montrose which Campsie renamed The Piper’s Private Hotel. They retired from the hotel trade in 1995.
Campsie’s other books include The Clarinda Conspiracy (1989), about Robert Burns, and a novel, By Law Protected (1976).
Campsie had played the pipes from childhood and, during his travels in Africa, always carried his instrument with him. Once described as one of Scotland’s finest amateur pipers, he was a keen proponent of the more rounded Cameron style of piping (against the more clipped MacPherson style), having been taught by Pipe-Major Robert Reid, a man described in his lifetime as “The King of the Pipers”.
Until the end of his life Campsie kept up his campaign against the piping establishment on his website, and passions continue to run high even after his death. An article on the website of the Glasgow-based College of Piping noted that, “like similar anti-establishment snipers”, Campsie was “seldom seen at any gathering or competition, preferring his own narrow, visceral polemic to opinion formed through social discourse and reasoned argument with fellow pipers”. The article went on to add, in a slightly more conciliatory tone: “Still, piping needs people like Alistair Campsie. ”
Alistair Campsie married, in 1963, Robina Anderson, who survives him with their daughter and two sons.
Alistair Campsie, born January 27 1929, died April 21 2013

Guardian:

Barbara Richardson writes: The films made by Joyce Robertson and her husband James had a huge impact on me as a trainee social worker in 1969 and still inform my views on childcare and parenting. They deserved a much wider audience: the messages in them are still relevant for every carer who looks after very young children.
I was once told that the film about “John”, a powerful study of the breakdown, in a very short time, of a small boy in residential care, could not be shown on TV because “it is too harrowing”. It would be a timely reminder to policymakers seeking to increase the number of children looked after by one carer if the Robertsons’ work could be the subject of a television documentary.
Malcolm Pim writes: While training as a social worker, I absorbed much from the Robertsons’ Young Children in Brief Separation films. Together with the then relatively recent work of John Bowlby on maternal deprivation, their work is still an influence, if not often acknowledged. The current theories around attachment, of course, stem directly from their work.

After three years of Tory-Lib Dem coalition, our economy remains in the doldrums, performing much worse than that of the US, where President Obama has achieved a deal of stimulus despite obstruction by Congress. We have a health service under increasing pressure and sliding with government encouragement into private hands; we have education being planned by the whim of a secretary of state whose latest wheeze is schools run by army officers; we have a welfare state re-engineered to produce homelessness, hardship and ever-growing child poverty.
Small wonder that more than 60% of the electorate disapprove of what this government is doing and want them gone, though how that will pan out in seats in the parliament to be elected in 2015 is uncertain. It is possible that the arithmetic might allow for the Labour-Lib Dem coalition that Martin Kettle is now advocating (Comment, 23 May), but politically at this moment the Lib Dems are part of the problem – they have voted solidly for every one of those Tory measures – and not part of the solution.
Is a politics in which the Lib Dems spend five years in alliance with the Tories demolishing the welfare state and the next five years in alliance with Labour rebuilding it for real? Either they believe in what they have been voting for or they don’t; and in either case, what credence can be put in them post-2015? The illusion that the Lib Dems are a progressive party is one that Martin Kettle has been peddling for years, but with Nick Clegg recommitting to the coalition with David Cameron to the bitter end, it should surely be clear even to him it has reached its sell-by date.
Pete Ruhemann
Reading

David Collier, England and Wales Cricket Board’s chief executive, reckons that cricket is in rude health at all levels (Report, 22 May) and that participation in grassroots cricket has increased over the last eight years. This must be a different game than that which I follow every summer weekend, as an official of the New Victoria CC in the Southport and District Amateur Cricket League. Hardly a season goes by without teams and whole clubs folding for various reasons. Even worse the Merseyside Competition, founded in 1929, was gradually undermined until it was left with hardly any teams. The Saturday section of the West Lancashire League went the same way. It would be interesting to know if this was the case in other parts of England and Wales and my guess is that it is.I wouldn’t be too confident about participation statistics. I can never remember us being asked, from above, how many members we had, young or old. Where Mr Collier’s figures come from, who knows? What I do know is that teams are still playing on grounds where the pitch care is nominal and where players get changed in cars and behind bushes. Far from being “one game”, there are the haves and the have-nots and most of the money goes to the former.
Dave Addison
Southport, Merseyside

Simon Jenkins has shown courage in connecting the criminal outrage in Woolwich with the participation of the UK in the use of drones to destroy whole village communities in Afghanistan (An echo chamber of mass hysteria only aids terrorists, 24 May). He is surely correct when he poignantly remarks: “Of course, people should be able to walk peacefully down the street in London. They should also be able to walk peacefully in Kandahar, Yemen or Baluchistan.”
We should be very grateful that our home-grown religiously inspired fanatics have not yet got their hands on a Hellfire missile, the standard weapon of choice used by Predator and Reaper drones operated by the US and UK in Afghanistan, and by the US in Pakistan, Yemen, Somalia and elsewhere. This missile can carry an anti-personnel charge which allows one missile to kill dozens, even hundreds of people. It is not difficult to imagine more sophisticated jihadists being able to mount such a missile on the roof-rack of a car (they weigh about 100-150kg), perhaps hidden in a roll of carpet. It could then be fired into a crowded market place and achieve a kill-rate comparable to that obtained in Afghanistan by the drone pilots based at RAF Waddington.
As Menzies Campbell correctly points out (Syria needs help but it does not need arms, 24 May), if William Hague gets his way and is allowed to supply sophisticated weapons to the Free Syrian Army, they will inevitably end up in the hands of the jihadists of the al-Nusra front. According to most reports, the latter is now doing the bulk of the fighting in Syria on “our” side and might demand access to the most effective weaponry from the FSA. It is not beyond the bounds of possibility that they would not mind supplying the odd missile or two to their fellow religious fanatics in the UK. It is even said that UK-born jihadists are already fighting in Syria with al-Nusra.
Dr David Hookes
Liverpool
• President Obama has defended his country’s drone attacks as “legal, effective and a necessary tool in an evolving US counter-terrorism policy” (Report, 23 May). According to the Bureau of Investigative Journalism, Obama approved 300 drone strikes in Pakistan alone between 2009 and 2012, that killed 2,152 people, including 290 civilians, 64 of whom were children. This is a higher death toll than the Bush administration in the period 2004-09, which launched 52 strikes, killing 438, including 182 civilians, 112 of whom were children. This comparison bears close scrutiny for those – including the Nobel Foundation – who feel that Obama represents a turn to a more enlightened page in US history. 
Stephen McCloskey
Centre for Global Education, Belfast

Illustration by Gary Kempston
I wholeheartedly endorse the anti-war sentiments expressed by Jude Law et al (Letters, 22 May). It may be worth reminding David Cameron, before he goes on to mark the anniversary of the first world war with a “truly national commemoration of national spirit”, that the so-called “war memorials” erected throughout the land after the war were originally called “peace memorials”. If you look at two politically neutral guidebooks, in Arthur Mee’s The King’s England, in the 30s, you will see them referred to in a quite matter-of-fact way as “peace memorials”, whereas three decades and another world war later, Nikolaus Pevsner’s The Buildings of England describes them as “war memorials”. Let any modern memorial mark that peace, and remember with humility the suffering and sacrifice on all sides rather than by taking pride in “national spirit”.
Austen Lynch
Garstang, Lancashire
• So David Cameron plans to spend £55m commemorating the 100th anniversary of the beginning of the first world war. I trust he will commemorate the West Indies Regiment. On 6 December 1918, 180 sergeants forwarded a petition to the secretary of state complaining about the levels of pay, which were much lower than for white troops, and the failure to increase their separation allowance, as well as discriminations in promotion. On the same day, the men of the 9th Battalion revolted as they had been forced to work as labourers, including cleaning the latrines of the Italian Labour Corps. So shall we also be commemorating British racism during the war?
Marika Sherwood
Sr research fellow, Institute of Commonwealth Studies, University of London
• David Cameron is unlikely to take the good advice of Jude Law et al and “promote peace and international co-operation”, especially given his current Ukip infatuation. However, individuals can decide to wear “never again” white poppies in 2014 as a reminder that, in almost all cases, war is a choice and peace an alternative. In doing so, they would also show sincere respect for those who have died or been wounded in war by signalling that they do not want such avoidable loss and suffering to happen again.
Richard Stainton
Whitstable, Kent
• If Martin Adams (Letters, 22 May) had read the article on the previous page by Guy Standing, about the progressive stripping of social security rights from working and unemployed people since the time of Margaret Thatcher, perhaps he would not have written about “the acts of bravery that helped ensure that this and other nations were not enslaved”, since that enslavement is precisely what so many of the unemployed, the disabled, the low-paid and the mentally ill experience as their daily lot.
Fr Julian Dunn
Great Haseley, Oxfordshire
• I thought the whole point of continued remembrance of the two world wars, and all wars, was to help to avoid starting another. Every November, across the world, there are thousands of services where lines from poems of Laurence Binyon and John McCrae are spoken: At the going down of the sun and in the morning / We will remember them (For the Fallen); If ye break faith with us who die / We shall not sleep, though poppies grow / In Flanders’ Fields (In Flanders’ Fields). Are these words not meant to be taken to heart?
K Vines
Yelverton, Devon
• The first world war was labelled the war to end war. The second world war, the war to end tyranny. War and tyranny still flourish. Both wars were failures. Those who died or were maimed for life fighting or sheltering from bombing or fleeing or starving were not the only casualties. Their families, their communities, their nations and their economies were all deeply affected for many years. At 88, my memories of both wars – my parents’ and my own – still bring me to tears. They failed. We need, as communities, to remember the suffering wars bring about, to recognise that to try to solve conflict by violent means, by war, will fail. I shall be adding my name to ww1.stopwar.org.uk and urging my friends to do the same.
Audrey Urry
Bridport, Dorset

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I send my sincere condolences to the family, friends and comrades of the brave soldier who was so barbarically slauhtered.
The lady who challenged one attacker is a very brave woman, as is the one who held the soldier’s hand while he lay dying.
When told by a cleaver-wielding maniac that he wanted to start a war in London, his challenger replied that it was just him against everyone else and he would lose. We must all unite against this atrocity and recognise this is a vile act by extremists who are pure evil.
Wendy Keelan, London SW16
 
What compels me to write this is the sheer brutality and inhumanity of the brazen attack. By bringing God’s name into it, they have actually defiled His name.
The police need to be commended for keeping their cool in such a trying situation and capturing them alive by wounding, not killing them in anger. It will now be possible to find out when and where these individuals became “Muslims”, who was their mentor and how many others are being “educated” that way.
Looking at the stills, the suspects do not appear to be mentally ill but they certainly have been brainwashed and their humanity has been turned around. It is a picture of a cult and not any religion, let alone Islam.
The government, past and present, has made mistakes but this is not the time for counting faults and failures. This is a time to come together and listen to each other. The secret services, the police and the communities need to come together and work together to root out this evil. 
One may consider some to be “swivelled-eyed loons” but let us accept the possibility that even those may come up with something sane which needs to be listened to. Keeping aloof will just increase the distance, and it is only by coming together that we can reach understanding and respect for each other.
Dr M Naseem, Chairman, Birmingham Central Mosque
 
A soldier is hacked to death on the streets of London. The violence is deplorable, but no amount of propaganda (by Boris Johnson and others) can gloss over the reality that we are at war.
We might try to sanitise it, by ensconcing our pilots safely in Lincolnshire as they control drones wreaking bloody havoc on tribal communities in Pakistan and Afghanistan, and by our media failing to report deaths of Afghans, but there is no escaping the truth that war is disgustingly violent. Yes, Britain’s present enemy is too poor to send planes to bomb the towns and villages of this country, but this doesn’t mean that we should be astonished, or deem it a “national emergency”, when supporters of the Taliban choose to take violent action on our streets, using what limited weapons are available to them.
Phil Harriss, Brill, Buckinghamshire
 
The killing in Woolwich is sickening and our thoughts are with the victim’s family. Such acts are incompatible with Islam.
The invasion of Iraq and Afghanistan, the drone attacks on Pakistan and other colonial interventions were eventually going to lead to such acts but Bush and Blair decided to ignore that.
Instead of preventing terrorism, these wars caused more terrorism. It is pathetic that the racist opportunists of the EDL and the BNP will use the loss of a life to justify more hatred and violence.
Mohammed Samaana, Belfast
 
If the planned brutal daylight killing of a British soldier by terrorists was to get maximum worldwide publicity for their cause, then they got it right, but the worry now is, will there be copycat killings by other like-minded would-be terrorists? The dreadful dilemma for the press and TV is whether to cover in macabre detail the acts of terrorism, doing what is basically their job to report events accurately and honestly, or to deny the terrorist the publicity by restricting reporting.
There is no clear policy in this, becauses we see modern technology with personal mobile phones and cameras overtaking conventional reporting and news coverage, with no holds barred.
Dennis Grattan, Aberdeen
 
Given the tidal wave of media Islamophobia, I trust some space will also be found to remind people of the criminal convictions of the leaders of the misnamed English Defence League.
keith Flett, London N17
 
One might take more note of the position of some extremists about Western soldiers killing Muslims if it weren’t the case that extremists were killing so many Muslims themselves.
Howard Pilott, Lewes, Sussex
 
National statistics show that about 300 people die from knife attacks every year. Few of these cases fit the media’s priorities, which to many appear racist, jingoistic and hypocritical.
Last month, 75-year-old Mohammed Saleem Chaudhry was fatally stabbed returning from prayer, in what police believed was a racist attack.
Theresa May did not recall Cobra. BBC News24 did not fill hours of air time asking local people if they felt safe (from whites). Newspapers did not print letters telling the “white” community to get its house in order.
Dr Gavin Lewis, Manchester
 
After the appalling slaughter of the young serviceman we, as a nation, must stand together in a very visible way.
Please, please buy a “Help for Heroes” T-shirt and wear it to show your support and solidarity with our brave armed forces. The most efficient way to defy those who seek to murder our troops is to wear a “Help for Heroes” shirt with pride.
Henry Page, Newhaven, East Sussex
 
MPs face pay rise of up to £20,000
A basic salary of £65,738 plus expenses is not enough for our MPs (report, 22 May).
Their pay body believes they’ve been working so  hard at choking off economic recovery that their pay should go up by £20,000 a year, with our average wage at £26,500 and the public sector in a pay freeze.
Arrogant politicians could take a few lessons from socialist councillors, who get only the average wage of the people they represent and fight the corner of ordinary people?
Daniel Pitt, Mountain Ash, Mid Glamorgan
 
Seeing the future
During my first week at teacher training college in 1945, a lecturer said, “The 1944 Education Act is now in place. We now have a Ministry of Education. The time will come when politicians will tell teachers what to teach and how to teach it.” Now we have Michael Gove. How lucky I was to teach when I did.
Ray Steele, Barnstaple, North Devon
 
Giant step for man
John E Orton (letters, 23 May) would have problems with his idea of walking tours across Hadrian’s Wall to gain illegal entry from Scotland. The Wall lies entirely within England. At no time does it lie near the border. In fact, its eastern terminus at Wallsend is almost 70 miles south of Scotland.
Philomena Lewer, Morpeth, Northumberland
 
Was Mary right?
With the revelations about Jimmy Savile et al, was the much-derided Mary Whitehouse much nearer the truth about morality at that time than many of us would care to admit?
Patrick McCausland, Seaford, East Sussex
 
Muslim radicals shame forefathers
I am a peace-loving atheist, disgusted by what is being done in the name of religion. To all young British Muslims who desecrate the Union Jack or burn poppies, I say you are doing a grave disservice to your forefathers.
In two world wars last century, four million Indians (including those who would later become Pakistanis) volunteered to fight alongside British troops to protect our country from Nazidom. Asian combatants were involved in every theatre of the Second World War. One-third of these volunteers were Muslim.
Some 27 Indians were awarded our highest military honour, the Victoria Cross, for their extraordinary valour. Rather than hail Bin Laden as a “hero”, young British Muslims should revere forebears such as Sepoy Ali Haidar, whose courage in Italy earnt him a very worthy VC.
Tens of thousands of brave Asian men died and many more were wounded fighting for Britain, so let’s not forget that.
To all those uneducated EDL thugs who talk about “Our country being overrun by Pakis”, you should learn more about our past reliance on foreigners, rather than attacking those who live among us, for being different. You are wrapping yourselves in a flag soaked with the blood of Asians who also fought the Nazis, including many Muslims whose religion you denigrate.
Our politicians must listen to what the disgruntled, radicalised Muslim youth are saying, and understand that our actions and foreign policies are the root cause of their discontent.
If Tony Blair and his colleagues had listened to millions of us on the streets protesting before he dragged us unwillingly into that bloody and disastrous campaign in Iraq alongside America, I suggest the 100 or so Muslim terror deaths on British soil since might not have happened.
The elders of the British Muslim communities need to instill in their youngsters that sense of national pride, and aspirations for our way of life that your forefathers displayed when they willingly put themselves in harm’s way for us.
In the name of Islam, you must stop tolerating the hate-mongering, Sharia-peddling extremists in your midst. Condemn them each and every day. Force them out in the open.
Will Patching , Phuket, Thailand

Times:

Graduate employment is by no means guaranteed, so prospective students should be careful when considering their choice of subject
Sir, I agree with Mary Curnock Cook of the Universities and Colleges Admissions Service (Ucas) that students should choose courses that they enjoy (report, May 24). Many parents and teachers wrongly assume that a legal career requires a law degree. In my case philosophy and theology were a more enjoyable preparation for life at the Bar.
John De Bono
Serjeants’ Inn Chambers
London EC4
Sir, The advice of Mary Curnock Cook to teenagers not to choose a subject to study at university on the basis that it might lead to a good job is reckless, especially in current times. Graduate employment is by no means guaranteed, with one in five graduates who are available for work being unemployed. Recruitment into “higher skilled” occupations has been in decline over the past ten years University fees of up to £9,000 a year mean that students are graduating with higher debts than ever, and house prices continue to rise above inflation. It is harder than ever for young people to get a foot on the property ladder, and graduating with a large debt and no thought about future employment is unwise.
While I was studying for my PhD at Imperial College just before the introduction of tuition fees, an academic involved in the university administration told me that it cost Imperial roughly £1,000 per home student per year to educate them. This was a result of the Blair Government’s target for half or more of young people to go to university, with no increase in total funding, leading to more university places but reducing funding per place. This has had an enormously damaging effect on the university system, and Mrs Curnock Cook’s advice does nothing to help that.
There are many well-paid and highly respectable careers which do not require a university education, and this is rarely talked about. These should be championed to young people as acceptable and worthy choices. In many cases three years of work experience at a young age can be far more beneficial to future prospects than three years of a university course, and the financial benefits are obvious.
Barnaby Garrood
Shamley Green, Surrey
Sir, As an 18-year-old Ucas applicant reading Mary Curnock Cook’s remarks, I must say that it is easy to tell a teenager to ignore the wishes of their parents. But when it is the parents who will have to supplement the student maintenance loans by at least £1,500 a year, it is neither simple nor sensible to apply behind the backs of your parents for a degree you are passionate about. It is better to apply for one that the parents consider more reliable.
Moreover, with the state of the job market now worrying for teenagers, how can Ms Curnock Cook advise them to pay £27,000 and spend three years in a course they will enjoy, but the rest of their lives in jobs that they will not?
If a person is passionate about a subject then they do not need to study it at university to remain passionate about it. The sacrifice students are faced with now is giving up something good for something better and giving up a mere three years in order to gain a dependable degree. Then perhaps they might spend 40 years in a better job.
Miriam Schechter
London

It is high time that the UK honestly addresses the roots of Islamic terrorism instead of focusing just on its contemptible results
Sir, The killing of the British soldier in Woolwich (reports, May 23) has to be condemned without reservation by all Muslims. Last week the British Muslim community was in the national spotlight with the conviction of a sadistic Muslim paedophile gang in Oxford. Now two Muslims — new converts to Islam — have brought further opprobrium to practising Muslims in the UK.
The scourges of paedophilia and terrorism within some strains of British Islam are sadly reflective of the broader incapacity of the Muslim community to fully integrate with the mainstream. If UK Muslims had a genuine stake in British society, the ideological drivers that fuel immoral sexuality as well as bloody terrorism would be inhibited, if not eradicated altogether. British Muslims must dissociate themselves from all variants of imported religious fundamentalism so that fascist groups and far-right organisations cannot exploit social tensions in the UK.
However, there are other unpalatable reasons for the Woolwich brutality. There is a correlation between Tony Blair’s illegal invasion of Iraq and the emergence of Muslim terrorism in the UK.
This is in no way to condone the despicable deeds of two opportunistic converts to Islamic fundamentalism who forlornly sought religious martyrdom, but it is high time that the UK honestly addresses the roots of Islamic terrorism instead of focusing just on its contemptible results.
Dr T. Hargey
Imam, Oxford Muslim Congregation

To encourage gardening among the younger generation cultural change is required through sowing the seeds at an early age at school
Sir, Your report (“Young generation just doesn’t dig gardening,” May 17) is nothing new. Gardening is, regrettably, unappealing to young people.
The RHS has launched an appeal to raise £1 million towards inspiring the next generation of gardeners, growers and garden designers. It says that the horticultural industry is facing a serious labour shortage, with nearly half of under-25s today dismissing horticultural work as an “unskilled career”.
Laudable though it is, I query whether simply throwing money at the problem is the solution. A cultural change is required through sowing the seeds at an early age at school. Part of playgrounds and sports fields could be turned over to chemical-free gardening and nature study. I learnt as a small boy how to grow and then pick raspberries for a healthy school lunch.
In the middle of London are the gardens of the Inns of Court where Kew-trained gardeners teach volunteers and apprentices how to tend gardens and plants.
Gardening in all green spaces is the essence of civilisation.
His Honour Judge Simon Brown, QC
Stevington, Beds

The proprietor of a local shop will retain and spend locally his trading profit, but international chains hardly benefit the local economy
Sir, The decline of locally owned shops (letters, May 23 & 24) has a malign effect on the local economy. The proprietor of a local shop will spend his profits locally and use local suppliers for many of his overheads. Superstores leave only staff wages in the locality and even that is less than the sum of the wages paid by the shops they replace. International chains are even worse as their profit is expatriated to the detriment of our national economy. A simple withholding tax on inter-company transfers and a more rigorous investigation by HMRC into the deductibility of such transfers (are they incurred “wholly and exclusively” for the purposes of the trade) would curb much of the current abuse.
Simon Banks
Burghclere, Hants

The UK invested less than £1.5 million in mesothelioma research in 2011, a fraction of what is spent on research into other cancers
Sir, The Mesothelioma Bill which is progressing through the House of Lords, and which received its Second Reading on Monday, represents a historic opportunity to secure long-term funding for research to find new treatments and ultimately even a cure for this dreadful disease.
Mesothelioma — the cancer caused by exposure to asbestos — kills 2,400 people every year, and it is forecast to kill a further 56,000 people over the next 30 years. Yet the UK invested less than £1.5 million in mesothelioma research in 2011, a fraction of what is spent on research into other cancers.
We are therefore supporting an amendment to the Bill which would create a secure, sustainable fund to support vital research into mesothelioma at no cost to the public purse. Our amendment enjoys all-party support. We very much hope the Government will take advantage of this opportunity and accept our proposal.
Lord Alton Of Liverpool, Baroness Butler-Sloss, Baroness Greenfield, The Bishop Of Hereford, Lord Howarth Of Newport, Lord Harris Of Peckham, Lord German, Lord Monks, Lord Pannick, Baroness Thomas Of Winchester, Lord Tugendhat, Lord Wigley, Baroness Masham Of Ilton

Telegraph:

SIR – Boris Johnson, the Mayor of London, is right when he says that the atrocity in Woolwich should not be blamed on the religion of Islam. But it does arise from a canker in the Muslim community, which must take a lead in cutting it out by cooperating with the police and security services – otherwise it will incur the wrath of the general public. It is not enough for Muslim leaders to say they disagree with such excesses, when their community is aware of the dangerous radicalisation of their young people.
Graham Lilley
Edge, Gloucestershire
SIR – This young serviceman stands as an example of all those who have fallen in Iraq, Afghanistan and throughout the world, whose names and deeds rarely come to public knowledge. Their sacrifice is no less mourned.
This event is a shocking reminder that Britain is on the front line in the war on terror. And it is all the more vital to remember that the actions of isolated and deceived terrorist cells do not represent the peaceful and tolerant faith of Islam as revealed by the Koran and subsequent teachings.
This is not a war against Islam, it is a war against fundamentalism and intolerance.
Related Articles
Is kissing at party conferences really necessary?
10 May 0017
Arthur Brittan
Nottingham
SIR – May I request that the powers that be remind themselves, forcefully, of Lady Thatcher’s wise words in a speech she gave in 1985 to the American Bar Association: “And we must try to find ways to starve the terrorist and the hijacker of the oxygen of publicity on which they depend”. As we have seen and heard since the atrocious murder in Woolwich, the opposite has been the case and can only be detrimental.
C A Delahunty
London W2
SIR – Perhaps the atrocity in Woolwich yesterday will underline dramatically and finally why the country needs the Prime Minister to concentrate on the serious problems that beset this country: terrorism, the economy, immigration and Europe, not on the relatively insignificant same-sex marriage furore.
John Wright
Hull, East Yorkshire
SIR – Is it not time to put aside our default moral relativism and ask whether there is something in the heart of Islam that allows acts of such barbarity as we have seen recently in Woolwich and Boston?
Barnaby Taylor
Falmouth, Devon
SIR – In view of the suspect’s comment “An eye for an eye” (report, May 23), is it fair to assume that the reintroduction of the death penalty would be acceptable?
John Breining-Riches
Chagford, Devon
SIR – When the police arrived at the scene of the Woolwich murder they were confronted and charged by two bloodstained men carrying knives and a pistol, who were then shot, wounded and are now in hospital. It is also reported that members of the Police Complaints Commission were also quickly on the scene. I hope they accept that in most other countries in the world these two thugs would now be dead.
Malcolm Allen
Berkhamsted, Hertfordshire
SIR – In the aftermath of the horror that was perpetrated in Woolwich, it is time for the public to show its support for the Armed Forces. The serviceman who died in the attack was wearing a Help for Heroes T-shirt, showing his support for wounded comrades. An appropriate response to the attack would be for the public to show their solidarity with our troops by wearing a Help for Heroes T-shirt, tie or wristband.
This would send the message that terrorists will never separate our people from our Armed Forces.
Phil Coutie
Twickenham, Middlesex
Secret arrests
SIR – Your piece about secret arrests (“The police should not be shielded from scrutiny”, leading article, May 22) requires response on a number of points.
It is a long-held principle of British justice that a person is innocent until proven guilty. The College of Policing’s guidance on police and media relationships holds to that principle. Many people are arrested as part of an investigation but not charged.
The guidance allows for naming people on arrest when doing so would prevent or solve crime, protect life or would be in the public interest – for example, if naming an arrested person is likely to lead to other victims coming forward. At the point of charge, personal details can be released. When arrested, a detained person has the right to a solicitor and can notify another person of their arrest. These are legal rights and ensure that arrests are not secret.
The guidance advises forces to be open and honest and establish good relations with the media. In forging these relationships, forces must ensure that they act with integrity and guard against the unauthorised release of personal information.
Chief Constable Alex Marshall
Chief Executive, College of Policing
London SW1
Not-so-Scottish oil
SIR – Many years ago I visited the Shetland Isles to discuss building storage to receive North Sea oil. The Shetlanders viewed the Scots as lairds and ministers of religion and, given the choice, preferred to stay with England with a status similar to the Channel Islands or the Isle of Man. I imagine the Orcadians may feel the same way – so “Scottish” oil gets less and less!
Richard Kellaway
Cookham Dean, Berkshire
SIR – Isn’t it time England sought independence from Scotland?
Roy Sedgwick
Weston-super-Mare, Somerset
Pies on fire
SIR – Until reading your leading article (May 21), it had never occurred to me to set fire to an Eccles cake. However, I have often set fire to mince pies since microwaves first entered my kitchen. It is a much anticipated feature of our Christmas celebrations.
Carolyn Andrews
Bournemouth, Dorset
Taxing complexity
SIR – Sue Cameron (Comment, May 23) highlights the absurdity of one of the tenets of English law, namely, that ignorance of the law is no excuse. When those involved in the law, including HM Revenue & Customs and accountants, have difficulty in comprehending what it means, it is ridiculous to expect a layman to have a greater understanding.
Taxation relies on the legislature to stipulate what it wishes to levy, but this does not happen; instead, politicians lecture on (of all things) morals and aggressive tax avoidance, the latter having no clear definition. It is up to Parliament to state unequivocally what it wants, not for the rest of us to guess.
Michael Morris
Haverhill, Suffolk
SIR – Why is the Government getting excited about companies legitimately not paying corporation tax when it has given special dispensation to the multi-millionaire soccer players, competing in the Champions League final at Wembley, not to pay UK taxes?
Graham Francis
Fetcham, Surrey
Brown before green
SIR – There are plenty of brownfield sites ripe for building on, such as disused airbases and old mining sites.
Let them be used before the planners despoil our green and pleasant land.
J A Nurcombe
Melton Mowbray, Leicestershire
SIR – I have an alternative definition of ”Nimby’’ for Michael Gove; someone who stands in the way of others who want to make a lot of money at his expense.
Colin Robertson
Bramhope, West Yorkshire
Prime movers
SIR – Your report on the swarms of cicadas now beginning to appear on the east coast of America (May 20), a once-in-every-17-years event, highlights the wonder of Mother Nature.
With 17 being a prime number, the frequency of appearance of these insects is calculated to avoid the interest of potential predators which might appear every two, three, four… up to 15 or 16 years.
Not that this will be of any comfort to those who have to put up with them.
Richard Symington
London SW17
Sir David Nicholson’s £2m pension is undeserved
SIR – It really isn’t difficult to identify the fact that the NHS is in a shocking state. Sir David Nicholson quit with a £2 million pension pot (report, May 22) after presiding over the Mid Staffs Hospital Trust scandal where many people died. The waste and incompetence is beyond belief.
The last government was too obsessed with targets and its own political reputation to manage the NHS gravy train properly and many people have died as a consequence. Change is urgently needed.
I’m still trying to work out how and why the Olympic opening ceremony focused on the NHS as a cause for celebration. Black armbands and a funeral march might have shown a more honest face to the world.
Mick Ferrie
Mawnan Smith, Cornwall
SIR – The amount that Sir David Nicholson is to be given in his pension pot is truly obscene. If the man had done the honourable thing, he would have resigned weeks ago for allowing the NHS to sink to the level that it is now. But of course there is no honour amongst thieves. One of my granddaughters is a paediatric nurse, having qualified six months ago. For helping to keep premature babies alive, her monthly salary hardly pays enough to live on, despite the fact that she and most other nurses work their socks off to achieve the high standards required of them.
Maybe Sir David will donate his millions to pay for the salaries of several hundred much-needed nurses, but I very much doubt it.
Clare M Blake
Sutton, Surrey
SIR – I wonder how much thought Sir David Nicholson will spare for those of us left propping up a National “Hellth” Service on the brink of collapse as he jumps on the gravy train to a six-figure annual sum for life.
As for finding his replacement, is there a man or woman on this earth brave or bold enough to take on the ultimate poisoned chalice?
Kirsty Blunt
Senior physiotherapist
Sedgeford, Norfolk

Irish Times:

Sir, – So what did Maureen O’Hara whisper into the ear of John Wayne at the end of The Quiet Man ? (Simon Carswell, World News, May 24th). May I suggest that it was “Do you know you’re standing on my foot”? to which he presumably said “You hum it, I’ll play it”. – Yours, etc,
FRANK GREANEY,
Lonsdale Road,

Sir, – I was breathalysed a few weeks ago at a random Garda checkpoint on the Stillorgan Road in Dublin. I have been an asthmatic for more than 30 years. I had no difficulty blowing into the bag for the required number of seconds. I passed the test. It is, however, comforting to know that in future, I along with the tens of thousands of other asthma sufferers in the country, will be able to avoid being breathalysed by stating that, just like Minister for Justice Alan Shatter, we too suffer from asthma.
Why do we keep electing these people? – Yours, etc,
CIARAN O’KELLY
Nutley Avenue,
Ballsbridge, Dublin 4.
Sir, – I find it hard to believe that Alan Shatter would be unable to fully complete his breath test when stopped by gardaí. In the last week he has blown so much hot air as to complete 1,000 breath tests. – Yours, etc,
CONOR COOKE,

Sir, – I can sympathise with the frustrations experienced by Sheila Maher (“Religious control of schools is neither tolerant nor inclusive”, Opinion, May 23rd ) at having to remove her child from Catholic religious education, which seems to take up so much of the curriculum as children approach Catholic communion time.
While my local primary school is supportive of me in taking my child out of the class during this time, it would help immensely if other parents would also take a stand, rather than display an all too apparent hypocrisy and go through the motions of Catholic communion just to feel inclusive and not wanting their child to miss out.
What I suggest to parents such as Ms Maher is to take their children away for a family weekend during this time and make them feel special. After a couple of days, when the carnival is all but over and forgotten about, the child can move on and once again feel inclusive, because after all, many of their peers won’t see the inside of a Catholic church again until they reach confirmation age. – Yours, etc,
PAUL O’DONOHOE,
Sir, – Independent paediatric specialists have requested that Minister for Health James Reilly reconsider the South Circular Road site as a more suitable location for the National Children’s Hospital than the St James’s Hospital site (May 20th). They make a very sound case for the 6.2 hectare site, which directly adjoins the Coombe Hospital, but the argument is even more compelling.
The Clear/Martin report prepared for the Minister for October 2012 found the planning risk at the South Circular Road site to be “low” but this was based on the misconception that “hospital use” was not among the land uses allowable. In fact, the site’s predominant zoning (Z14) permits the same medical uses as are permitted on the St James’s site (Z15). In other words, the planning risk at the South Circular Road site is even lower than that suggested in the report for the Minister.
In contrast, the planning risk associated with the St James’s site is entirely different. The Clear/Martin report states, “the nature and location of the site pose a number of planning issues which would need to be resolved if the planning risk is to be reduced”, suggesting the planning risk would be “moderate” if the site area for the proposed hospital were to be enlarged from 2.44 hectares to 3.5 hectares. But even such additional land would only allow very limited, if any, room for future expansion of the planned children’s hospital. In the planning of any new hospital this is surely unacceptable.
To assuage the concerns of the New Crumlin Hospital Group chairman (May 22nd) regarding further delay, it should be made clear that there is no suggestion that the decision in relation to citing the national children’s hospital on the St James’s campus be changed – simply that the campus be expanded to include the South Circular Road site (it has already been earmarked by St James’s Hospital for ancillary medical activities).
The lesson of the attempt to locate the children’s hospital at the Mater site is clear. The site was too small and was turned down by the planning appeals board. Here, again, we already know the preferred site is too small. Why on earth would Dr Reilly risk repeating a similar outcome when a more suitable site almost twice the size, on an expanded campus and carrying negligible planning risk is available? – Yours, etc,
VALERIN O’SHEA,
Member of the Dublin C

Sir, – A pattern is occurring after each Islamic extremist terrorist attack.
Following the incident and initial shock, the media spend a day or two producing reports on the Muslim community and the challenges that it faces in having to live and assimilate into society. This is followed up by the usual letters and heartfelt pleas from members of the community not to tar all Muslims with the one brush.
Of course nobody, with the exception of the extreme far right would do such a thing. However, I’ve yet to see any mass street demonstration of moderate Muslims disavowing extremism. I don’t see any reports of senior Imams castigating fundamentalism from the pulpit in Mosques. I do not see Islamic extremists being rejected from mainstream Muslim society nor any widespread support of the police in doing their job, protecting society.
What I do see and read is the constant reasoning away of these atrocities as being caused by “western policies”. Isn’t it about time the average follower of Islam who disavows extremism, which is the vast majority, stood up and was counted? All that their silence and passivity is doing is feeding the extremists on the far right, and making their recruiting task a lot easier. – Yours, etc,
DERMOT McALLEN,

Irish Independent:

* Sir, I want to congratulate Seamus Coffey on his article on austerity (Irish Independent, May 21).
Also in this section
Banality republic
Casting the first stone?
State ‘jobs for the boys’ policy benefits us all
In his article, he tells us the simple fact that ‘we are spending more money on government services for ourselves than we are collecting in tax revenue from ourselves’.
A bandwagon has being going for some time in which too many in politics and the media have been saying that austerity is not necessary and/or is not working.
Seamus Coffey assures us that austerity is both necessary and working and he gives us the figures to prove it.
He tells us that in the last five years the cumulative budget deficits added up to nearly €120bn (over 90pc of GNP) and the rescue of the Irish banking system contributed around €40bn to this.
In 2009, the deficit on providing government services was more than €15bn.
This year, as a result of austerity, it will be €4bn.
The truth is that, as a result of past mistakes, the present austerity is unavoidable.
Seamus Coffey has done us all a service by telling us the story in understandable figures.
A Leavy
Shielmartin Drive, Sutton, Dublin 13
ARROGANCE OF BRUTON
* I am writing concerning John Bruton’s lecture on ‘frugality’. I find the arrogance of the man breathtaking considering his vast income and pensions.
The only thing I find “immoral” is that “retired” politicians and senior civil servants are allowed to work full-time and continue to draw pensions from their previous employment.
Why does John Bruton suggest that pensioners and people on low-incomes be further penalised?
Liam Mac Cionnaith
Co Luiminigh
A FRIEND PLANTS A SEED
* “Still cold enough for month of May and growth sluggish,” I remarked to a casual acquaintance on entering the newsagents last evening. “Except for dandelions,” he replied. “The roadsides, fields and lawns of the country are covered with them.”
How right he was! So prolific was the dandelion crop around my holding that on the following day I went to the garden centre for a spray remedy. Rather than encourage my custom, the merchant half muttered: “Aren’t dandelions like ‘golden flowers from heaven’ compared to the cold wet barren sight that was our lot for the past months?” Once more I had to agree, while deciding it was time I did a little research on dandelions.
The common dandelion is a perennial yellow flowering herbaceous plant. After flowers have gone, fruits form and open up with the seeds inside attached to little bristles that travel large distances in wind. Bees and butterflies are attracted to the yellow flower and help pollinate them. Deer and rabbits feed off the leaves and certain birds such as goldfinches eat the seeds.
Herbalists view the common dandelion as a valuable herb because of its medicinal and culinary uses. It is used by children in play, but despised by gardeners because they overcrowd crops.
Its food value in salads, soups, winemaking and green tea are well known, but the medicinal value of the dandelion is vast. It is used to treat everything from stomach problems, gallstones, joint pains and eczema to being recommended as skin toner, blood tonic, aid to viral infection and in cancer treatment.
Nature provides us with many blessings – if only we had the eyes to see.
James Gleeson
Thurles, Co Tipperary
EDUCATION ON SUICIDE
* According to the article in your newspaper ‘Suicide risk for men under 21 is four times higher’, (May 21) Prof Kevin Malone, author of a report on suicide, “says Irish youths have the fourth highest suicide rate in Europe, and the numbers taking their own lives is rising”.
Why is there such a discrepancy in the rates of suicide between men and women?
From a young age, boys are taught not to cry. Such shows of emotion as fear, timidity or sadness are frowned upon. Boys learn, both consciously and unconsciously, to suppress their emotions. For girls, such expressions of emotion are encouraged and girls consequently feel more comfortable with their emotions and with expressing them.
The teenage years are difficult at the best of times. Children move away from the security of their parents and begin the tentative steps of forming their own independent personalities.
Their interests, their values, even their sexuality can all be in the mix. Coupled with this, in their late teens they do what’s commonly regarded as the most difficult exam they will ever do in their lives, while trying to figure out what career they will follow.
No wonder some teenagers fall through the cracks. Many feel unable to articulate their difficulties or reach out for help. By the time these boys become young adults, the die is cast.
A lifetime of “programming” can be very difficult to overcome.
When a crisis occurs they feel unable to cope and suicide unfortunately is looked at as an option. However, there is hope.
According to the report “existing suicide intervention and prevention programmes may be missing the boat by not focusing on school-age young people”. I agree. Education can play a huge part.
I believe resources should be put into organisations like Positive Mental Health here in Galway, with whom I am a volunteer. We deliver modules to transition-year students on all aspects of mental health, from bullying to relationships to peer pressure – aspects of a young person’s life that are just as important as getting good grades in the Leaving Cert. Positive strategies to help people who are experiencing difficulties are an integral part of the modules we deliver.
Everyone takes the emotional well-being of young people for granted, but the recent suicides of young people show us we do this at our peril.
Thomas Roddy
Salthill, Co Galway
COST OF CROMWELL MAPS
* I was interested to read in an Irish Independent article that Trinity College Dublin has launched the entire Cromwellian map collection of Ireland, made shortly after Oliver Cromwell’s successful conquest of Ireland, available online for the first time. Thirty-two counties, 240 baronies, 2,000+ parishes and 62,000 townlands. http://downsurvey.tcd.ie.
TCD associate professor of modern history Dr Michael O Siochru said of it: “Some of the maps are in magnificent condition, beautifully coloured and engraved. They are beautiful works of art and it’s the first time in 300 years that this collection has been back together.”
It is believed to be the first time in world history that a country had been mapped in such detail in ‘The Down Survey’, conducted between 1655 and 1658 and supervised by William Petty, surgeon general in Cromwell’s army. Ireland’s population was then estimated at 200,000. It seems a small number and can’t be known for certain.
Astonishing too, when one considers that 200 years later it had exploded to more than six million by the Great Famine in 1845.
One can view on the TCD Down Survey website a Cromwellian map of a region of the country with a Google map and satellite image of today below it.
There was a human cost which lies behind the creation of these ‘beautiful’ maps. Irish people were evicted in their tens of thousands from their homes, lands and properties and shipped in large numbers as slave labour to new English colonies overseas in the Caribbean and the few early colonies in the US.
Let us admire the Cromwellian maps, but also remember the Irish people taken, never to return.
M Sullivan
College Road, Co Cork
Irish Independent

* I find it hard to understand why we entered a singer for the Eurovision noise and banality competition when we had the more relevant expertise of Jedward available.
Also in this section
Proof that austerity is necessary and working
Casting the first stone?
State ‘jobs for the boys’ policy benefits us all
* I find it hard to understand why we entered a singer for the Eurovision noise and banality competition when we had the more relevant expertise of Jedward available.
When will we wake up to the fact that banality is an imaginative art form?
Music, as we know it, has had its day; noise is here to stay. We should open our arms to the possibility of becoming a banality republic. Music is a figment of the bourgeois imagination.
The great advantage of the noise movement is that there are no rules – nothing to inhibit the free flow of indiscriminate sound.
There is noise all around us; we should celebrate it as if we can’t get enough of it.
We should liberate ourselves from the constraints of music and start living. This is the age of the decibel where everybody is a prodigy.
Our children should be exposed to this world of arbitrary noise where they can all have a go, repress their inhibitions, cut loose and defy the laws of gravity by letting their hair up.
Schools should be compelled to develop a cross-curricular policy on noise, so that students are prepared for the real world, not the dying world of music.
Additionally, all educational institutions should intensify the banality movement, by helping to dispose of the idea that dance is concerned with patterns of disciplined movement, rather than with pure arbitrary gyration.
Even nature is catching on; there are fewer song birds in our garden. We now regularly awaken to the attractive monotonous tone of the pigeon, giving us a break from the now outmoded, dulcet tones of the blackbird and the thrush.
There are exciting rumours to the effect that Louis Walsh is going to take charge of the proposed new ministry for noise and banality.
However, I am not convinced that he is sufficiently tone deaf to meet the demands of the new post.
Philip O’Neill
Edith Road, Oxford
ZOMBIE NATION
* At last, a man of my own heart (Padraic Neary, Letters, May 21). Are we alone in thinking that technology, for all its advantages, and there are many, also has a dark side?
In my opinion, not only does it wipe out jobs by replacing human beings, it is slowly turning people into zombies who cannot last a day without Facebook, spell, or hold a conversation without flicking through their phone. More importantly, people no longer understand the importance of keeping their lives private.
Like everything else in life, unless we are directly affected, we really pay no attention. If technology doesn’t rob you of your job, why care about anyone else?
When you walk into a bank, you are greeted by machines, the same with supermarkets. When you go to an ATM, it will probably dictate what you can take out, in other words, you have no control over your own money.
When you ring most companies, you find two minutes later you are still being spoken to by a machine.
Day by day we are becoming willing zombies who just accept what is thrown at us. We love the term “fighting Irish”. In my opinion, we have become complacent fools who, quite frankly, deserve what we get.
C McGarry
Co Dublin
TAX TEETH
* How can you tell that the bite in Apple’s logo is not the bite from Ireland’s taxman? The bite is too big.
Kevin Devitte
Westport, Co Mayo
TAKING A BOUGH
* Perhaps, after all, we are not the Apple of the EU’s eye?
Tom Gilsenan
Beaumont, Dublin 9
WHERE IS THE LOVE?
* John O’Connell opines that “You come to God, to Christ and to the church through love and not law” (Irish Independent, May 22), citing “compassion and understanding” within the Catholic Church.
In reality, of course, individuals and in particularly children, come to “God, Christ, and the church” through the abhorrent practice of childhood indoctrination.
From the psychological perspective of a child, this is the law, masquerading as love. Yet the difference is quite stark, considering the fact children are incapable of understanding and accepting such theological, philosophical and fictional concepts under their own volition. It is, actually, forced upon them. A distinct lack of compassion and understanding.
Gary J Byrne
IFSC, Dublin 1
SMARTPHONE
* I was typing the word Dail into my smartphone when it ‘corrected’ the word to Fail. I reckon it’s more than a smartphone, it’s an intelligent phone.
Conan Doyle
Co Kilkenny
HELP FOR IMMIGRANTS
* The hope offered to Irish and other undocumented by the prospect of genuine immigration reform in the US (Illegal Irish get chance to step out of shadows, Irish Independent, May 23) will be greeted with relief by thousands.
However, that hope stands in stark contrast to the frustration, distress and heartache being caused to those in a similar situation in this country, where successive governments have failed to introduce a streamlined, transparent and modern immigration system. Our politicians would do well to learn from the lead taken by US President Barack Obama.
As a first step, the Government should introduce its long-awaited policy on family reunification, and set out clear rules for Irish citizens and migrants legally living here who have been torn apart from loved ones.
A clear and transparent appeals system is also needed and there are many other areas in need of reform, including improved access for workers who can help fill the skills gap in many sectors.
Our political leaders were quick to mobilise our full diplomatic and lobbying ability in Washington, to bring about reforms there, now it is time they looked closer to home.
Denise Charlton
Chief Executive
Immigrant Council of Ireland, Dublin 2
THE WHOLE TRUTH
* The truth has now been shot at by so many people and nations, that it may well decide to crash-land into their very heartlands.
If it does, you may be sure that the resulting shockwave will be the equivalent to that of a maximum magnitude earthquake.
There won’t be too many reputations or shibboleths left standing after it hits.
Patriots, Kevlar and Star Wars missile defence systems will not offer any protection.
What say you that the “hawks” are given the job of coming up with an even better description than “shock and awe” to describe the aftermath?
It should keep them suitably engaged, while a true and believable audit of the real state of world affairs, is carried out by somebody other than any of the Big Four.
Before I am accused of being a seer or soothsayer, let me say that I am neither. Anyone who has attempted to predict the future in the past has failed to be outlandish enough in their speculations as to what has actually transpired.
After all, Shakespeare himself wrote: “There are more things in Heaven and Earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy.”
Liam Power
Angel’s Court, San Pawl Il-Bahar, Malta
Irish Independent


Sun

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Sun 26th May 2013

I trot round the park today and listen to the Navy lark. I Oh dear, oh dear
Troutbridge is sent off to test out a new piece of equipment, a navigation device. I works perfectly despite Leslie’s efforts to correct it. Though it does make some very rude noises at him Priceless.
A quiet day off out to the garden mow the lawn, water the plants and have a go at the Russian vine.
We watch ‘The Perfect Woman’ a wonderful old film
Mary wins at Scrabble today, just and gets just under 400, I might get revenge tomorrow, I hope.

Obituary:

Paul Shurey
Paul Shurey, who has died after a fall aged 54, was one of the key movers and shakers in the rave scene of the late 1980s and early 1990s, when hordes of pharmaceutically fuelled revellers gathered to dance the night away to pulsating electronic music – often to the dismay of the Establishment.

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Paul Shurey 
6:22PM BST 24 May 2013
Raves evolved from the so-called warehouse parties first held in disused factories in northern industrial cities, notably Manchester, from the mid-1980s. The warehouse gatherings initially featured a mix of music styles, but as the decade progressed, and the parties hit London, electronic beats came to dominate and the events were rebranded Acid House Parties, often featuring the Smiley face logo as their emblem.
The electronic music behind the Acid House phenomenon, characterised by basslines modulated on synthesizers to produce a distorted effect, had emerged in mid-80s Chicago. It was imported to Britain in 1987, notably by the DJ Danny Rampling at the nightclub Shoom. When it and other such clubs shut their doors for the night, many danced on at after-parties, which were frequently raided by police. To escape such unwanted attentions, promoters began to organise secret parties in locations ranging from former East End jails to rural barns. The rave was born.
Many of those attending were young male football fans and, perhaps inevitably at a time when terraces were plagued by hooligans, the huge unregulated raves were viewed with suspicion by the authorities, who often found themselves outmanoeuvred or overwhelmed by the size and speed with which the underground scene was flowering.
Yet instead of violence, raves aimed to embody the sunny Mediterranean attitude of Ibiza, where the electronic dance music scene quickly took root. Above all, there was the all-pervading presence of the drug ecstasy, whose users were mostly minded to gurn and grin inanely rather than glass each other. As events mushroomed across the country, there was talk of a “Second Summer of Love”; advocates even credited raves with a tailing-off in football hooliganism, as working-class fans found an altogether trippier way of working through their frustrations.
Paul Shurey began running unofficial parties from 1989, when the scene was dominated by promoters known as Perception, Sunrise and Raindance. Under these names, parties soon took on vast proportions, attracting up to 10,000 people, and featuring huge speaker systems, light shows, and even fairground rides. Many were staged in the open air, in the home counties around the M25 – hence the name of one emerging dance act, Orbital. Shurey’s own parties were initially promoted under the name Brainstorm, then – with Rob Vega and Jamie Smith – Universe. Setting up after a location was found could take as little as an hour . “Dancing under the stars, with the sun coming up in the morning, is to my mind the true, original acid house, rave experience,” Paul Shurey would say later. “Forget about reality. Step into our virtual world.”
Shurey’s most significant contribution to the rave scene came when, with Ian Jenkinson, he decided to launch Tribal Gathering, a vast outdoor festival devoted entirely to dance music, with several different stages and DJs. It was first held in April 1993, at Lower Pertwood Farm, Wiltshire, with more than 25,000 people attending. As well as Danny Rampling, the roster of DJs included several names who would go on to become highly-paid superstars of the club scene, notably Pete Tong, David Morales and Carl Cox.
Tribal Gathering was considered a huge success, but plans for a second event in 1994 were disrupted by the Criminal Justice and Public Order Act of that year, which legislated, among many other things, against “persons attending or preparing for a rave” and music which “includes sounds wholly or predominantly characterised by the emission of a succession of repetitive beats”. As a result Tribal Gathering moved to Munich in 1994. But by teaming up with experienced events organisers from the Mean Fiddler group, the festival was able to return legally to Britain in 1995, with Orbital among the headline acts at Otmoor Park, Oxfordshire.
By 1997 Tribal Gathering was so successful that it was able to attract the notoriously perfectionist German group Kraftwerk, long wooed by British promoters, to play at Luton Hoo. But with success came battles over naming rights and money, and Shurey fell out with the Mean Fiddler group. As a result Tribal Gathering 1998 was cancelled. Shurey attempted to put on an independent festival , but ticket sales were poor. The premier dance event of that year, Creamfields, was run by Mean Fiddler.
Having helped bring an underground music scene into the mainstream, Shurey found himself frozen out. “Our big legal battle with Mean Fiddler totally disillusioned me with the whole dance scene,” he said. “I just wanted to get away.”
Paul John Shurey was born on Christmas Eve 1958 at Longfield, Kent, the son of a Customs and Excise officer and a schoolteacher. The family moved to Birmingham when he was a young boy, and Paul was educated at Hall Green junior school . He won a scholarship to King Edward’s Grammar School and from there to Warwick University, where he studied American History.
His career as a party organiser began at Warwick, where he became the social secretary of the student union, a role whose duties involved, among other things, booking bands for concerts. A talented illustrator, he also launched a punk magazine called Blades ’n’ Shades, which featured many of his own graphics and cartoons.
His studies were brought to an abrupt end when, on the last night of his third year of studies, he was a passenger in a car involved in a serious crash, which put him in intensive care for several weeks. When he eventually came out of hospital he decided to drop out of university and dedicate himself full-time to a band which he had formed just before the accident. A drummer, Shurey had been taught to play by Clem Burke of the band Blondie .
Shurey’s band was called the VIPs, and played a form of soft punk. Their first record was described by John Peel as his “favourite record of the moment” and they were signed to the Gem label. After releasing several singles which achieved moderate chart success, Shurey left to form, in 1981, Mood Six, a five-piece band for which he played keyboards.
To capitalise on the “New Psychedelia” fad then under way, Shurey acquired a bright orange Vox Continental organ from Steve Harley of the band Cockney Rebel. He was also involved in running The Groovy Cellar club in London, which was the heart of the New Psychedelia movement. Mood Six were signed by EMI, and the band’s first single was called Hanging Around. An album followed, but the group’s members fell out , and Shurey decided to quit.
After a couple of years in Paris, where on one occasion he played in the backing band for Serge Gainsbourg, Shurey returned to London , starting a clothing label called Wild with outlets in Portobello Road, and Hyper Hyper in Kensington High Street. Initially highly successful, Wild supplied clothes to many pop groups, notably Frankie Goes To Hollywood.
His next venture was in record distribution and promotion with London Records FFRR. It was through London Records that Shurey was first introduced to the dance music trends emerging from Chicago. He then started promoting illegal parties, having teamed up with a friend who owned a high-quality sound system, and a group of travellers who owned a circus tent. Putting the two together, Shurey threw his first parties in fields in the countryside outside Bristol, where he then lived. To avoid police attention, he would select three potential locations for any event. If he felt that the police were on to one, he switched to another at the last moment.
Rumours of such parties would begin to swirl in the week before they were held. Partygoers would then congregate at pubs before being given a rendezvous, often a motorway service station, from where a convoy of vehicles would head out to the party destination. They would aim to arrive at 10-11pm on a Saturday night; sometimes revels would last for two or three days.
The success of Shurey’s parties grew until they were so large that one was held in a disused aircraft hangar in Wiltshire. Police, who had taken a fairly lenient attitude until then, arrived at midnight with a riot squad and a helicopter hovering overhead. Thousands of revellers barricaded themselves inside and continued dancing until 7am, when the police finally forced their way in.
Such was the parties’ popularity that Shurey decided to organise them on a legal basis. He began a weekly club night at Club UK in London and set up Brainstorm, which then became Universe.
After the dispute with Mean Fiddler, Shurey moved into digital marketing and went back to university to study television production. His first job after graduation was with a shopping channel. After moving to the production company Tiger Aspect, where he worked on shows such as Secret Diary of a Call Girl, he went to Cupid, a dating website company, before, in 2012, founding his own dating site for married people who wanted to have affairs. His father was scandalised.
Shurey was still running the site when, in March this year, he travelled to India. He was there when he suffered a fall, hitting his head and suffering injuries from which he never recovered.
Paul Shurey married (dissolved), in 1989, Caroline Mannion, with whom he had a daughter, who survives him.
Paul Shurey, born December 24 1958, died April 24 2013

Guardian:

The article on the bullying tactics of barristers in the “grooming” case missed the matter of principle from which that crass bullying arises (“‘Why are you lying?’ demands the barrister”, News). A lawyer in court enjoys privilege and can make unsubstantiated derogatory statements and allegations to or about accused persons or witnesses, and even libel people not party to the proceedings in question, with no fear of redress.
There may be situations outside courts where privilege from redress must be extended to people, for example, who seek to uncover corruption and dishonesty, or where doubts need to be raised over actions in corporate or public office, but, in a court of law, where privilege is accepted, a judge in a case should surely be able to draw a firm line where the privilege is being abused and where it is harmful to the cause of justice.
Professor AJ Pointon
University of Portsmouth
Time to kick out the touts
I sympathise with Fred Gilroy’s disappointment at being unable to secure Dr Who Prom tickets for his children but I feel that contacting the Albert Hall and his MP to complain, and your reporting of it, displayed a misunderstanding of a complex ticketing process. (“Outraged fans call for crackdown on ticket touts as £12 seats for Proms go for £500″, News)
The completion of a Proms Plan is merely the first step in an unpredictable process. It could hardly be otherwise, with thousands of concert-goers going online simultaneously at 9am on the 11 May. In fact, Mr Gilroy did quite well to have only a 10-minute wait before getting into the queue for tickets. I was online at 9am prompt and waited 30 minutes to get in the queue.
To call this process “unethical” misses the point and underestimates the reality of such an enormous ticketing undertaking. What is surprising is that the Observer chose to undermine the validity of its argument – that touts are a real problem and that the selling-on of tickets is manifestly unfair – by reporting Mr Gilroy’s complaint as evidence, rather than a misunderstanding of a process.
John Johnson
Luton
Legacy of childhood trauma
It is true, as Professor O’Donovan asserts in his letter (“Claim that abuse is behind psychosis is irresponsible”, Big Issue) that “correlation does not equal causation”. It is a pity he does not apply the same dictum to his own genetic research, which is entirely correlational and has yielded very weak associations between specific genes and psychosis.
We recently published a review of the most rigorously designed studies of childhood trauma (not just abuse but also separation from parents and bullying by peers) and found that children who had been traumatised had a three times increased risk of psychosis in adulthood (Varese F, et al. Childhood adversities increase the risk of psychosis, Schizophrenia Bulletin 2012; 38:661-71, free to download), a far stronger association than between psychosis and any specific gene. The risk increased dramatically for children who experienced multiple traumas.
The most plausible explanation is that childhood trauma does play a causal role in adult mental illness, although this does not mean that every patient has experienced trauma as a child. Many other factors are involved, including the strongest predictor of mental health problems – poverty.
Richard Bentall and John Read
Professors of clinical psychology, University of Liverpool
Cut the demand for drugs
As we know, supply and demand control commercial dealings (“Europe and the US should heed Latin America on drugs”, editorial). The failed US and European anti-drugs policies have concentrated mainly on attempting to restrict supply. Perhaps now more emphasis needs to be placed on trying to restrict demand. This is not easy, but some guidance can be found in parallel situations, especially with alcohol. The various authorities could make it difficult to combine drugs with doing the things that we want to do.
Publicity campaigns and the development of simple testing have reduced the combination of alcohol with driving; similarly, the combination of performance-enhancing drugs with competitive sport; of alcohol with various kinds of responsible work. Such an approach could at least restrict recreational drug use; much of the remainder is more a medical or public-health problem anyway and requires other solutions.
David Hunt
West Wickham, Kent
Why insist on celibacy?
The Catholic theologian Professor Werner Jeanrond is quoted in your article (“Cardinal still a danger, say abuse accusers”, News) as saying: “As a church, we have failed to come to terms with homosexuality.” I would say that it has failed to come to terms with any sort of sexuality. The church’s insistence on the chastity of its clergy has led to a suppression of natural feelings that, in many cases, has caused individual clergy to be unable to practise what they preach. It additionally has led to the totally unreasonable doctrine that condemns contraception, leading to much individual suffering, at the same time as contributing to the rapid growth of population.
Roger Plenty
Stroud

‘Tis much ado about nothing or, as Freud would have said, “the narcissism of small differences” (“How our tax inspectors fell in love with tycoons”, Nick Cohen).
Britain’s mainstream parties pretend to differ on the taxation of multi-nationals yet were happy with Revenue & Customs cutting sweetheart deals. They also pretend to differ on the EU, yet are committed, as are many Eurosceptic Tory MPs, to the free movement of labour within an ever expanding, albeit looser, EU.
This is to be expected of ideologically driven globalists and Mammon worshippers. Not for these laissez-faire spear-carriers to worry about uncontrolled immigration because, they say, it will be self-regulating.
It also happens to be morally wrong to import cheap labour with the aim of driving down unskilled wages. Achieving a living wage for our unskilled citizenry will require curtailing immigration from within the EU as well as without.
There will be a transfer of purchasing power from the “haves” to the “have-nots” as menial jobs that cannot be outsourced abroad become more costly. This is a small price to pay for anyone concerned about national cohesiveness.
Yugo Kovach
Winterborne Houghton
Dorset
Eric Schimdt (“At Google we aspire to do the right thing. So we welcome a debate on international tax reform,”, ) writes a convincing article for reform of international corporate tax in his capacity as an executive chairman of a capitalist multinational company. But it is just that.
He tells us: “It’s probably only a significant increase in international tax globally that would make every country a ‘winner’ – and the consequences of that would likely be less innovation, less growth and less job creation.”
However, more revenue to national exchequers can lead to a multiplier effect for society as a whole. Greater investment in infrastructure, increased income for publicly financed job creation and redistribution of income to boost consumption are just some of the potential multiplier effects.
As for his point about innovation, there is now reputable research (eg William Lazonick and Mariana Mazzucato) which shows that innovation, especially in high risk and high capital intensity areas, rather than being initially financed by private companies, is significantly funded by governments.
Michael Somerton
Hull
Eric Schmidt is disingenuous in the extreme when he says that companies should be taxed where their economic activity takes place and their profits are generated, which he claims is where his engineers are based – in the US.
Common sense would say the tax should be paid to the society from which the revenues are drawn as it is this society’s expensive welfare systems that create a society with money to spend. As for wanting a pat on the head for investing £1bn in London property, he surely must realise that the London property market needs foreign capital as much as it needs a tsunami and if he really cares two hoots about the UK he should open his new office in Tyneside.
Silas Sutcliffe
London NW3
I totally agree with Nick Cohen when he wrote: “Tycoons enchanted politicians. They convinced them that their interest and the national interest were as one.” It was not only the politicians who were enchanted by tycoons. Journalists and newspaper editors became “enchanted”, too, and many still are.
So I was not that surprised to find Google chair Eric Schmidt had been given half a page in the same edition to whitewash his company’s tax avoidance schemes. Pull the other one, Eric; the British people have no interest in a debate with you, we just want you to pay your taxes.
Mick Hall
Grays

Independent:

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Planned mega-farms for salmon, pigs and cows would cause massive environmental damage, both in terms of their immediate environs and also the costs of shipping large amounts of food supplies into them, and waste away (“Health fears as huge livestock ‘factories’ arrive in Britain”, 12 May). It is disturbing that the Defra spokesperson talked positively about this development in terms of the “efficiency of food production”. This is a myth.
It isn’t “efficient” to drive out of business small farmers, who care for their landscape, work with the ecology of their land and provide employment and local food supplies, replacing them with giant factories that can only be disastrous for human and animal health, abusive of animal welfare and greatly damaging to the environment. We should remember swine flu in 2009, linked to intensive pig farming in Mexico, and the serious concern about antibiotic resistance expressed by England’s chief medical officer in March.
Natalie Bennett
Leader, Green Party
London W1
This is a moment of solidarity with Lee Rigby’s family. Muslim youth needs to know that our armed forces fulfil the tasks entrusted to them, and that foreign policy is an expression of our national interests, which can be changed through national consensus, civic efforts and legitimate lobbying. The democratic values of Britain are here to stay, come hell or high water.
Dr Lu’ayy Minwer Al-Rimawi
Visiting Fellow, Harvard Law School
Peterborough, Cambridgeshire
Hampshire Police, who in 1989 reinvestigated the murder of Daniel Morgan in 1987, found that the original investigation was “pathetic” but not corrupt (“A shameful case…”, 12 May). The remit of the new inquiry should be to examine the investigations into the murder of Daniel Morgan. Anything else betrays an agenda.
Richard Christie QC
Johnathan Lennon
London EC4
Parents looking at student contact time and fees are coming up with a hefty hourly rate for some university courses (Margareta Pagano, Business, 19 May). Some courses such as medicine seem to have a lot of contact time and are good value for money, but for arts-based courses, less than 10 hours’ contact time per week is common. When we asked our daughter’s university to replace a cancelled seminar, the response was very dismissive, giving the impression that contact time with students was an optional extra, and got in the way of academic life for the lecturers.
Bryan Cadman
Bristol
You ask what the EU has ever done for us, “apart from delivering nearly 70 years of peace” (“New poll puts Ukip in third place…”, 19 May). But it was Nato who stood up to the supposed Soviet threat in the immediate post-Second World War world, while EU membership hasn’t stopped Britain being involved in military activity overseas, such as in Iraq and Afghanistan. Nor will it stop future terrorist attacks, the main threat to world peace today.
Tim Mickleburgh
Grimsby, Lincolnshire
You refer to Wolves fans singing “Que sera sera, whatever will be will be, we’re going to Shrews-bu-ry…” at their last game of the season as they faced up to life in League One next season (Sport, 19 May). But they were far from being the first fans to sing this version this season. It was actually first heard at Ashton Gate, home of the mighty Bristol City, on the night of Tuesday 16 April, when City needed to beat Birmingham City in order to have any chance whatsoever of staying up. Half time saw Bristol 1-0 down, and clearly heading towards the trap door. It was as the second half started that the fans on the East End – closely followed by most of the rest of the ground – started singing this song. This match was some four games before the end of the season, and played when Wolves still had chances of saving themselves!
Kevin Rawlings
Clevedon, North Somerset
Looking at the shift of audiences from Radio 1 to 4 with age, Katy Guest argues that listening to The Archers from the start is not essential (“Wear low-slung jeans? Radio 1 is your station, 19 May). But it is. Forget Today. If you want to discover the zeitgeist, it’s in Ambridge.
Keith Flett
London N17
Have your say

Times:
The easy way to close Britain’s tax loopholes
IT IS not surprising that  profit-maximising multinationals try to pay little or even no corporation tax despite being highly profitable (“Google insider exposes ‘immoral’ tax scam”, News, “Don’t be evil, dudes —  unless it turns a buck”,  Profile, and “Any way you Google it, it is wrong”, Editorial, last week).
What is surprising is that the law allows them to get away with it. Until — and unless — an international agreement is reached to ensure that large businesses pay their fair share of tax, Britain needs to introduce a straightforward anti-avoidance law.
This would charge corporation tax on a reasonable estimate of the profits generated by all UK sales, to individuals in Britain and other UK businesses, whether in shops or online. The location of the head office or where the profits are declared would then be irrelevant, so the tax could not be dodged by moving the business to a tax haven. 
Richard Mountford, Tonbridge, Kent

No excuse 
One can only congratulate Margaret Hodge on her tenacity in turning the spotlight on the dubious statements and accounts provided by Google et al to Her Majesty’s Revenue & Customs (HMRC). The light should now be shone on HMRC, which appears to have had little stomach for questioning the practices and credibility of the large multinationals.
The excuse that it is all very complicated and we don’t understand is wearing a bit thin. Does a reasonable person believe Switzerland plays a key role in making and selling a Starbucks cup of coffee in the UK? I doubt it. I would also suggest the Commons public accounts committee stop using the word “fairness” — it sounds like begging.
No company or individual aims for fairness in settling their tax liability: the sole aim is to get it as low as possible.
David Ladlow Douglas, Bergisch Gladbach, Germany

Street view 
While the immorality of the tax avoidance by such firms as Google and Amazon is now apparent, the damage already done to our jobs and high streets cannot be overestimated. The government should bring them to heel as soon as possible but in the meantime perhaps people can be persuaded to shop on their high streets rather than online to deprive such internet giants of their immoral earnings.
Peter and Eleanor Davies, Linghams Booksellers, Wirral

Legal battle 
There is nothing moral or immoral about paying or not paying taxes, and no person or business will voluntarily pay more tax than they are legally obliged to. If the government is unhappy about the way multinational corporations operate here, it needs to change the rules.
Name withheld

Stranger than fiction
Concerns over Google’s practices were expressed as long ago as 2007. The sci-fi author Cory Doctorow wrote a disturbing story called Scroogled that depicted a world owned by Google. The writer’s grim prediction that total information equals total  power was spot-on. How can you read it? Just Google it.
Dr Nigel Robinson, Leighton Buzzard, Bedfordshire

Inclusive plan for civil partnerships
WHY don’t we take this opportunity to think outside the box on extended civil partnerships (“Ministers defy PM on gay marriage”, News, and “Say it loud: we’re proud of gay marriage”, Nick Herbert, Comment, last week)? Millions of cohabiting couples and their families at present are unprotected by any rules, so how about broadening the concept to all who want it? 
Anne Kruse, London N3

Pensions omission 
Herbert has argued strongly for gay marriage to address the “final anomaly” in equality between gay and straight couples. However, he omits the most glaring inequality of all — pension rights. The civil partnership legislation of 2005 determined that a surviving civil partner could benefit only from pension rights accrued since 2005, but the proposed gay marriage laws will replicate the anomaly.
Trevor Skipp, Chertsey, Surrey

Union dispute
What supporters of gay marriage fail to understand is that marriage is specifically and intrinsically a relationship between a man and a woman. To try to extend it to include gay couples is like trying to extend vegetarianism to include people who eat meat. 
Richard Harris, Shoreham-by-Sea, West Sussex 
 
Right-to-die requests should be respected
IT ISN’T just dementia that thwarts our plans (“Dementia thwarts best-laid plans”, Letters, last week). I also  dread the disease that robbed me of my mother, and the thought of my daughter changing my nappies and enduring tyrannical rages  and repeated conversations fills me with dismay.
So strong are my feelings that five years ago I wrote a detailed advance directive,  had it witnessed, shared it with my family and lodged a copy with my GP. I take little comfort from this as it  appears that some people — who do not know me but  have some religious or ethical opinion — are insisting they have more rights over my  body than me.
Why should the limited resources of this tiny planet be used on my dribbling, deranged shell when I’ve requested otherwise?
Sue Parkes, Halesowen, West Midlands
Police failure on abuse
IT IS the lack of action by the police that particularly troubles me in the shocking abuse of girls (“Officialdom’s golden rule of child protection: save your own neck first”, Comment, last week). I can understand them considering that their ability to prosecute is limited, owing to the vulnerability of the witnesses, whose testimony is unlikely to stand up to scrutiny in court. However, they should not be closing the file at that point, but thoroughly monitoring  the suspects. 
Richard Adams, Exeter, Devon

Child protection
The behaviour of groupies and the abuse of children cannot be compared (“Rushing to judge”, Letters, last week). While some groupies may have behaved badly, they would have chosen freely to behave in that way towards another adult — a wholly different matter from a powerful, famous adult imposing his will on a child.
The youngest of Stuart Hall’s victims was nine at the time of the abuse, and Jimmy Savile was said to have preyed on children barely old enough to go to school. With those as young as five there cannot possibly be two sides to the story. Indeed, the attitude of the police at the time was the reason why victims did not complain.
That in itself is sufficient to show why there should never be a statute of limitation for child abuse.
Dr Nick Winstone-Cooper, Laleston, south Wales

Total eclipse of the art
I recently visited Tate St Ives in Cornwall, where, to my great surprise, no artwork was to be seen (“It’s a miracle! After years of thematic muddle, Tate Britain’s clear and chronological rehang has given London a proper national museum, while turning up lost treasures”, Waldemar Januszczak, Culture, last week). I had expected there would be works of art by the many artists who have worked in St Ives and who have helped to make the place famous. It seems absurd to pretend that this place is an art gallery when, in fact, for large periods in between exhibitions it is only a shop and a restaurant. Obviously no rehang is needed at Tate St Ives but a rethink might be a good idea.
Aart van Kruiselbergen, London N1

Points
Shame on Scotland
Scotland’s reputation of fairness in the eyes of the world has been sullied by the thuggish protests during Nigel Farage’s visit to Edinburgh and Alex Salmond’s refusal to condemn them. The Scottish adage of “Wha’s like us” has taken on a different hue. Salmond often claims Scotland is different from England. He can say that again.
Stan Hogarth, Strathaven, Lanarkshire

Emission statement
We should be grateful to Dominic Lawson for confirming how important it is for the Prince of Wales to continue speaking up about issues such as climate change (“With the deepest respect, Charles, please do shut up”, Comment, May 12). Lawson’s claim that the planet “was doing just fine when CO2 concentrations were vastly higher” shows the success of the fossil fuel lobby’s brainwashing. 
Jakob von Uexkull, London SW1

Woman about the house
Your report “By George, he’s got it” (Focus, May 5) lists women’s qualities in the workplace as, among others, being reasonable, patient, co- operative, supportive and good listeners. Is there a recorded instance of them also showing these qualities at home? 
Simon Sinclair, Stockport, Cheshire

Corrections
An article about solar panel schemes (“Has the sun set on solar power?”, Money, last week) incorrectly stated that a 2.7-kilowatt peak solar panel system would cost £7,000 to install and that customers would therefore have to wait 16½ years to recover the cost of the original investment, based on a total income and energy bill savings of £550 a year minus maintenance costs of £1,000 every eight years. In fact, a system of this size would cost about £5,400 to install and therefore customers would have to wait 12½ years to recover their original costs, according to the Energy Saving Trust.
Complaints about inaccuracies in all sections of The Sunday Times, including online, should be addressed to editor@sunday-times.co.uk or The Editor, The Sunday Times, 3 Thomas More Square, London E98 1ST. In addition, the Press Complaints Commission (complaints@pcc.org.uk or 020 7831 0022) examines formal complaints about the editorial content of UK newspapers and magazines (and their websites)

Birthdays
Simon Armitage, poet, 50; Helena Bonham Carter, actress, 47; Paul Collingwood, cricketer, 37; Howard Goodall, composer, 55; Hazel Irvine, broadcaster, 48; Stevie Nicks, singer, 65; Michael Portillo, broadcaster, 60; Matt Stone, co-creator of South Park, 41; Philip Treacy, milliner, 46

Anniversaries
1865 Confederate general Edmund Kirby Smith surrenders in Texas, in effect ending the American Civil War; 1897 publication of Bram Stoker’s Dracula; 1907 birth of John Wayne, actor; 1977 George Willig climbs Tower 2 of the World Trade Center

Telegraph:
SIR – Throughout Thursday’s BBC Two drama-documentary The Last Days of Anne Boleyn, it was repeated time and time again that the story has divided historians for more than 600 years.
I know that time passes faster with increasing age, but Anne Boleyn’s death in 1536 still appears to be only 477 years ago. Mental arithmetic is evidently a thing of the past.
Robert Grindal
Reading, Berkshire

SIR – I recall being told while Tony Blair was prime minister that troops were being sent to Afghanistan to keep terrorism off our streets and to help prevent drugs being openly traded throughout the world.
Terrorists walk freely through our streets. As for the supply of drugs, there seems to be an abundance of them available publicly and, indeed, in prisons.
I take it, then, that all our brave young men and women who have lost life and limb in Afghanistan have done so in vain.
Ian Beck
Crosby, Cumbria
SIR – Ingrid Loyau-Kennett’s courage in trying to reason with one of the suspects armed with a meat cleaver will, I hope, be recognised in the Birthday Honours.
Related Articles
Anne Boleyn was not as old as we were told
25 May 2013
John Lidstone
Fleet, Hampshire
SIR – It would appear that the Metropolitan Police now have a policy, where weapons are being used, to wait for armed back-up. Hence the gap between the first officers on the scene at Woolwich and the matter being dealt with by armed officers.
I hope that my belief is wrong because otherwise a lot of unnecessary carnage will happen.
In 1962 as a young PC of 20 years of age, I disarmed a lunatic eastern European kitchen worker who, with a huge machete, was threatening residents of a Chelsea hotel. I was unarmed, with a truncheon only, which I did not draw.
David Cooper
Herne Bay, Kent
SIR – I was an English Roman Catholic living here in the Seventies and Eighties, while madmen claiming to be of my faith were butchering innocent people, including children. I felt anguish then, as I’m sure so many Muslims do today at the suggestion that Islam is the cause of the act of barbarism in Woolwich.
I urge all British people to extend a friendly hand to decent people of that faith to show we do not hold them responsible for the actions of a couple of madmen.
Linda Kendall
Rayleigh, Essex
SIR – Mehdi Hasan (Comment, May 24) says it is not Islam that turns young men to terror. He quotes from the Koran (5: 32): ‘Whosoever killeth a human being it shall be as if he had killed all mankind, and whoso saveth the life of one, it shall be as if he had saved the life of all mankind.”
Immediately after that passage it reads: “The only reward of those who make war upon Allah and His messenger and strive after corruption in the land will be that they will be killed or crucified, or have their hands and feet on alternate sides cut off.”
A minority of Muslims see the decadent West as at war with Islam. Those bent on violence do not have to look very far for blood-curdling language to justify them in their attacks.
Michael Staples
Seaford, East Sussex
Children viewing porn
SIR – So far, our society’s response to the widespread corruption of children by easily accessible internet pornography does indeed appear to be to “throw up our hands and insist that nothing can be done” (Leading article, May 24).
Ever since the sex gurus of the Sixties accused us of being narrow-minded, urging us to be more “open” about sex so that our children would be able to lead more happy and fulfilled lives, we have been too terrified of being accused of prudery to address the disastrous failure of this malign social experiment.
At the same time we have developed an over-protective attitude to child welfare on eating, drinking and just about everything else.
If we can develop a system sophisticated enough to prevent children from seeing a cigarette advertisement, surely it is not beyond our capabilities to shield them from something that is equally damaging to their well-being, both physically and psychologically, since many are now enacting the evil that they see and we refuse to see.
Ann Farmer
Woodford Green, Essex
Jumping or pushing
SIR – Simon Major (Letters, May 23) is of the opinion that all voters in the United Kingdom should have a say in the Scottish referendum.
Does he also advocate that all voters in the European Union should have a say in the referendum on the UK’s membership of the EU?
Neil Bennett
Winchcombe, Gloucestershire
SIR – Simon Major was mistaken in stating that the whole of Sudan got a say in the referendum regarding separation.
The right to participation in the referendum was limited exclusively to those from South Sudan, and all such Southerners were eligible to vote, irrespective of where they lived. Thus voting centres were opened in South and North Sudan and in foreign cities such as Washington, London and Nairobi.
My Sudanese friends tell me that if the whole Sudanese population had been eligible to vote, the result would have been reversed – something to do with the location of the oil which, as we all know, is predominately in the South, and is not anticipated to run out for a while.
Charles Mathews
East Meon, Hampshire
Dangerous cheese
SIR – Your leading article (“Free cheese rolls”, May 24) mentions the 86-year-old cheese-maker who felt “threatened” by the police, who warned her that if she provided a cheese for the Cooper’s Hill cheese-rolling event she could be held responsible for any injuries.
I wonder whether the police should warn the manufacturers of rugby balls, boxing gloves and cricket bats that they, too, could be held responsible for any injuries sustained using their products?
Alexander Segall
Ilford, Essex
Scents and sensibility
SIR – Yesterday I visited four large stores in Exeter. At each I was greeted with an overwhelmingly sickening scent of warm perfume before I could get anywhere near the department I actually wanted.
Why do so many stores think customers should have to run the gauntlet of such smells?
Linda Brightwell
Okehampton, Devon
Slots for the Scots
SIR – The announcement that Flybe plans to sell Gatwick slots to easyJet (report, May 24) puts a significant failure of British government policy in sharp focus, particularly in Scotland. We are now seeing alarming signs that Scotland’s connections with London are being undermined.
The reason any airline can sell landing and take-off slots in the first place is that a market has been created by their scarcity. Successive governments have consistently procrastinated on the subject of London airport capacity.
Connections to London, and via London to the world, are critical for the success of the whole of the United Kingdom. A lack of leadership puts future prosperity at risk.
The Airports Commission, examining the need for additional airport capacity and recommending to the Government how this can be met, is a step in the right direction, but only if politicians of all parties have the courage actually to deliver new runways. We’ve had plenty of words, even a White Paper, but Britain cannot trade its way out of an economic storm on the back of a policy paper.
We have to decide what airport capacity we need in this country, and build it.
Bill Drummond
Chairman, Scottish Council for Development & Industry (SCDI)
Malcolm Robertson
Chairman, SCDI London Committee
Michael Urquhart
Chairman, SCDI Highlands & Islands Committee
Litter trail
SIR – If Michael Gove would really like to do something useful, I would recommend he introduce a course on litter awareness at all primary and secondary schools, such as is seen in Sri Lanka.
The 2013 Duke of Edinburgh Awards are in process, and it is easy to follow the route taken by the candidates on their map-reading course, since it is clearly marked by crisp packets, soft-drink cans and chocolate-bar wrappers.
Andrew H Molle
Chesham, Buckinghamshire
Pardon my French
SIR – Steve Howe (Letters, May 22) asks what equivalents the French should use for phrases such as bête noire, raison d’être and cul-de-sac. He should remember George W Bush’s famous statement that “the French don’t have a word for entrepreneur”.
Steve Masters
Reading, Berkshire
Re-using farm buildings need not spoil the view
SIR – Changes to planning rules will not lead to a “rush” of uncontrolled building on agricultural land (report, May 10), because safeguards will be in place.
The National Farmers’ Union has long argued that farmers need more freedom to re-use buildings without the need for planning permission. The concession agreed by the Government will now apply to offices, retail, light industry, warehousing and financial services.
Only buildings in existence when the consultation paper was published last summer will be eligible for conversion. All but the smallest buildings will need to undergo checks to ensure that there will be no unacceptable effects such as noise or transport problems.
These changes will boost the rural economy without harming the countryside.
David Collier
Chief Rural Affairs Adviser
National Farmers’ Union
Stoneleigh Park, Warwickshire
SIR – In this village we have two sites designated for new housing in the draft South Worcestershire Development Plan, both within the Cotswolds Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty (AONB).
This is despite the “great weight” that Eric Pickles, the Communities Secretary, has said will be given to the protection of AONBs by the National Planning Policy Framework, and despite our local authority’s own strategic housing land availability assessment clearly showing “plenty of potential housing land capacity beyond the AONB”.
When the draft of the National Planning Policy Framework was being discussed, the then planning minister said: “It is not the intention to provide more housing than a locality needs.”
The then environment secretary said: “Sustainable development does not mean a new housing estate on the edge of a pretty village.” It is now proposed that we have both.
The real danger for the future of the countryside is that the effect of these policies can never be undone.
Graham Love
Broadway, Worcestershire

Irish Independent:

* Driving through Connemara, I could not help but observe again the landscape, that is scarred, even seemingly in the most inhospitable and inaccessible places, by the long-abandoned markings of potato allotments that were the only giver of life and harbinger of death should they yield or fail in their cultivation.
Also in this section
Banality republic
Proof that austerity is necessary and working
Casting the first stone?
This was in a country and time of both plenty and want. Yet, they were the only legal comfort left to a seemingly doomed indigenous people. Still too, they could smile just before and after the tears.
Hermann Von Puclker-Muskau, a travel writer from Germany visiting Ireland in 1828, and between famines, wrote the following observations:
“Our driver blew his horn, as in Germany, a signal from the mail-coach to get out of its way. However, the sound was so distorted and pathetic that everyone burst into laughter.
“A pretty 12-year-old lad, who looked like joy personified, though almost naked, let out a mischievous cheer, and called after the driver in his impotent rage: ‘Hey you! Your trumpet must have a dose of the sniffles, it’s as hoarse as me auld grandmother. Give it a drop of the craythur or it’ll die of consumption before ye reach Galway!’
“A crowd of men were working on the road. They had heard the feeble sound from the horn, and all laughed and cheered as the coach went by.
“‘There you are, that’s our people for you,’ said my companion. ‘Starvation and laughter – that is their lot. Do you suppose that even with the amount of workers and the lack of jobs that any of these earn, have enough to eat his fill? And yet each of them will put aside something to give to his priest, and when anyone enters his cabin, he will share his last potato with them and crack a joke besides.’”
Barry Clifford
Oughterard, Co Galway
GARLIC RATE FOR APPLE
* This thing with Apple only paying 2pc on its income: could we try taxing them at the rate for garlic?
Donal O’Keeffe
Fermoy, Co Cork
MALE PREGNANCIES
* With the many advances in medical science, surely it should now be possible for males to become pregnant. Abortion debate, what debate?
Eithne Mac Fadden
Carrigart, Co Donegal
SUNNY SIDE OF POLITICS
* Jerry Buttimer TD reckons the abortion legislation might not make the Government’s deadline of being ready before the summer.
Free GP care for the long-term ill has been pushed back; the children’s hospital is on a longer finger; reform of the Dail, Seanad and local government is moving at a snail’s pace; and jobs strategies are barely moving. Now TDs head off on a summer break, still claiming expenses, while families struggle with less and less and the retail sector keeps going despite less money in families’ pockets and rising rates.
It proves the point that politics is the conspiracy of the unproductive but organised, against the productive but unorganised.
Conan Doyle
Pococke Lower, Co Kilkenny
IMPACT OF NEUTRALITY
* Mary Kenny comments on Ireland’s wartime neutrality in the wake of the pardon for Irish army deserters. Yet she shuns the term deserters (Irish Independent, May 20).
Rather she refers to the “Irish soldiers who joined the Allies”. Your columnist states how “neutrality was widely democratically supported”. Only one Dail deputy, James Dillon, courageously opposed the policy. Ireland had no enemies: “a small nation stood alone”,
She mentions some social consequences of Irish neutrality, eg: Irish women only took to wearing trousers in the 1960s. Oddly enough, she ignores the most important and immediate impact – innumerable Irish lives were saved. Eamon de Valera’s finest feat was his successful pursuit of a neutral policy. Alas, eaten bread is soon forgotten.
Anthony Barnwell
Dublin 9
FINGER ON THE PULSE
* Whatever one says about Alan Shatter, as a minister he can’t be accused of not having his finger on the pulse.
Mark MacSweeney
Upper John Street, Cork
SHATTER AND THE TRUTH
* I would ask Justice Minister Alan Shatter to consider the real reason for the disharmony from the public regarding the current penalty points fiasco.
I do not believe that the public’s anger relates to how individual gardai use discretion whilst performing their duty. The anger relates to when a member of An Garda Siochana punishes an offender for a road traffic offence that they believe should be penalised, and another member of the force removes these penalties from the Pulse system. Once an offence has been recorded on Pulse, it should stay there. If the offender feels the penalty is unjustified, it should be up to the courts to decide.
This is where the anger lies as it is seen to benefit a minority of motorists. Mr Shatter clearly believes it is moral to inform the public of a named individual’s brush with garda discretion, but not moral to name those who had penalty points removed from the Pulse system by members of the force.
Tony Finn
Finglas, Dublin 11
CALLED TO ACCOUNT
* Can somebody explain to me why Deputy Mick Wallace’s law breaking (because using a mobile phone while driving is law breaking) should be kept confidential?
Just because the gardai did not prosecute or issue a penalty notice does not change the facts. I suggest that had Justice Minister Alan Shatter, or any other minister, been found using their mobile phone the incident would not have remained private for long and the media or opposition deputy would consider it a national duty to reveal the facts.
This is akin to the fallacy that because a deputy is going to or from the Dail he cannot be given a fixed penalty or prosecuted for driving offences. I accept that they should be immune to arrest while travelling to the Dail on a day when the Dail is in session, as otherwise an arrest could be made to frustrate democracy.
As it is, it appears that a TD can claim to be travelling to the Dail at any time and so is practically immune from prosecution.
Andrew Duffy
Address with editor
ANTI-MAN LAWS
* The tragic issue of male suicide has received widespread media coverage. While the causes are many and varied, one theory which has gained widespread acceptance is that men don’t talk about their problems or seek help.
Those who subscribe to this theory tell us that there is always help available. I can think of eight male acquaintances who died by suicide in the past decade. All of them talked openly about their problems and sought help. There was one common factor in all of these cases. Each had been through the family law system and had his life and fatherhood severely diminished or even destroyed in a variety of ways.
Can those who tell us that there is always help now tell us how we can save innocent, law-abiding men from what in my opinion are anti-man, anti-father practices in law, which are undoubtedly a contributory factor in the high rate of male suicides?
Name and address with editor
Irish Independent


Sharland and Sandy

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Sharland and Sandy 27th May 2013

I trot round the park today and listen to the Navy lark. I Oh dear, oh dear
Fatso Ordinary Seaman Johnson is writing his memoirs, all about how Pertwee is rotten to him. But Pertwee diverts him to writing a history of all the ships named Troutbridge. But its though too dangerous and might fall into the hands of the enemy Priceless.
A quiet day with a visit by Sharland and Sandy totally exhausting
We watch ‘The Happiest days of your life’ a wonderful old film.
No Scrabble we are just too tired so its off to bed.

Obituary:

Ronald Payne
Ronald Payne, who has died aged 87, was a genial Telegraph foreign correspondent and writer of books on espionage with a rich appreciation for the comedy of human life.

Payne with Col Gaddafi one of his many foreign adventures 
6:10PM BST 26 May 2013
From the early 1950s he covered anti-colonial troubles in Lebanon, Cyprus, Morocco, Tunisia and Algeria. He measured the mounting tensions of the Suez crisis by noting Egyptian graffiti which proclaimed “Your king is a woman” and hearing the waiters at his hotel furiously shouting “Death to the British”. When the waiters spotted him, they politely added: “Not you, Mr Payne, not you”.
After being brought home to be diplomatic correspondent of The Sunday Telegraph, Payne collaborated closely with Christopher Dobson on joint assignments, which took them throughout Europe and the Middle East. Marshalling their detailed research and shrewd judgments, arrived at over long lunches, they would file their combined copy under the byline “rondob”.
During the 1973 Yom Kippur war they were crossing a pontoon bridge over the Suez Canal when their car broke down under sporadic artillery fire, from which they were rescued by an Israeli officer who took them to General Ariel Sharon’s headquarters. They remained for three days, attending meetings conducted in English for their benefit before filing their dispatches and being reunited with their car – which had been repaired and delivered to the enemy side of the bridge with a full tank of petrol.
One of Payne’s most striking assignments was an interview with Col Gaddafi of Libya in 1976. After a 10-day delay Gaddafi received him first in Bedouin robes, then in military riding dress before finally sitting down in a sharp suit. He denied supplying arms to the IRA; thought England ruled Ireland; and when asked unwelcome questions lapsed into long silences .
The resulting article was translated into Arabic for a Tripoli newspaper as a propagandist hymn of praise to “the world’s greatest leader”. Later the translator offered “a small apology for taking certain liberties”.
The son of a Primitive Methodist minister, Ronald Staveley Payne was born at Ripon, North Riding, on February 6 1926, and aged five enrolled as a Little White Ribboner into the Women’s Temperance Association; the certificate remained on his office wall all his life. He had his first taste of journalism when he arrived at school one day so full of his experience in the Hull blitz that he was asked to relate it to his class.
After Bedford School, Ronnie Payne joined the Royal Marines and was commissioned into 42 Commando, with whom he fought in Holland. He then read History at Jesus College, Oxford, where he wrote for The Isis before joining the Reading Mercury.
He arrived in Fleet Street as a leader writer for The Evening Standard and, with his beard, burly build and ever present pipe, quickly became a familiar figure. He joined the Telegraph as a reporter and was sent to Paris to cover the fizzling political climate and the troubles in North Africa. The paper had a palatial office on the Place Vendome staffed by three reporters as well as the young Jimmy Goldsmith – an unpaid dogsbody who once made Payne an offer (refused, naturally – of a free girl at an exclusive brothel.
In 1979 Goldsmith made Payne and Dobson a more conventional proposal, and the pair moved to Now, the short-lived news magazine which the businessman had started. After 19 lucrative months they were back on Fleet Street with plenty of material on Soviet espionage and international smuggling to sell to the Telegraph and other publications.
They also produced a series of popular books, which began with The Carlos Complex (1977), about the sinister and charismatic terrorist, Carlos the Jackal. The Falklands Conflict, written with John Miller, the paper’s Moscow correspondent, was the first account of the 1982 war; it came out the day British troops entered Port Stanley and sold 100,000 copies. The Dictionary of Espionage and War Without End (1984) dealt with the spreading tentacles of terrorism; and with Miller again they produced The Cruellest Night (1979), about the sinking in April 1945 of the large German passenger ship Wilhelm Gustloff.
Among the books Payne wrote on his own were Private Spies (1967), about the growth and increasing professionalism of industrial espionage; Mossad (1991), an account of the Israeli secret service; and an Insider’s Guide to the Press (1996). At the same time he continued to produce columns and features for The Sunday Telegraph on such subjects as the resident cat, Kitty, in the Shakespeare & Co bookshop in Paris; life in Saddam’s Iraq; and the bounty hunters obstructing the hunt for the missing Terry Waite.
He also joined The European when it made its debut. At the opulent party to mark the event, Payne remarked to the publication’s founder Robert Maxwell, who was keeping an eye on proceedings, that there was “no such thing as a free launch”. On one assignment, Payne tracked down John Cairncross in Provence, where the spy was writing a book about the Jesuits .
Ronnie Payne and his third wife, Celia Haddon, the Telegraph’s pet correspondent, retired to Oxfordshire, where he published One Hundred Ways To Live with a Cat Addict (2005). In it he stressed the need for one firm rule: “Keep cats out of the bedroom at all costs. Infuriating feline fascination with what the humans are up to must have spoiled more nights of passion than grey flannel knickers ever did.” It was followed a year later by One Hundred Ways To Live with a Dog Addict.
His wife and a stepdaughter survive him.
Ronald Payne, born February 6 1926, died May 25 201

Guardian:

The Lose the Lads’ Mags campaign by UK Feminista and Object is calling on high-street retailers to immediately withdraw lads’ mags and papers featuring pornographic front covers from their stores. Each one of these stores is a workplace. Displaying these publications in workplaces, and/or requiring staff to handle them in the course of their jobs, may amount to sex discrimination and sexual harassment contrary to the Equality Act 2010. Similarly, exposing customers to these publications in the process of displaying them is capable of giving rise to breaches of the Equality Act.
High-street retailers are exposing staff and, in some cases, customers to publications whose handling and display may breach equality legislation. Displaying lads’ mags and pornographic papers in “mainstream” shops results in the involuntary exposure of staff and, in some cases, customers to pornographic images.
Every mainstream retailer which stocks lads’ mags is vulnerable to legal action by staff and, where those publications are visibly on display, by customers. There are, in particular, examples of staff successfully suing employers in respect of exposure to pornographic material at work. Such exposure is actionable where it violates the dignity of individual employees or customers, or creates an intimidating, hostile, degrading, humiliating or offensive environment for them. We therefore call on such retailers to urgently heed the call to Lose the Lads’ Mags.
Aileen McColgan Matrix Chambers, Sarah Ricca Deighton Pierce Glynn Solicitors, Anna Mazzola Bindmans, Mike Schwarz Bindmans, Harriet Wistrich Birnberg Peirce & Partners, Helen Mountfield Matrix Chambers, Elizabeth Prochaska Matrix Chambers, Tamsin Allen Bindmans, Gwendolen Morgan Bindmans, Salima Budhani Bindmans, Nathalie Lieven QC Landmark Chambers

Further to the article by Julie Bindel (Let this be the Macpherson moment for domestic abuse, 22 May), fMRI brain scans from the US show, perhaps surprisingly, that to an even greater extent than actually being abused themselves, exposure to and directly witnessing domestic violence has the most profound effect of all on the developing brains of children in terms of patterns associated with features of post-traumatic stress disorder. Referral rates of such children presenting with behavioural problems and/or symptoms of PTSD, to child and adolescent mental health service clinics in this country by GPs and social workers, provide further evidence that the harm done to them by seeing their responsible adults – almost always their mums – being subjected to violence is therefore both psychological and physical. Subsequent, potentially lifelong, elevated cortisol levels when faced with stressful situations mean that they risk “hidden costs” for the rest of their lives in terms of things like drug and alcohol problems and relationship difficulties, to name but three. While EMDR (eye movement desensitisation and reprocessing) and other treatments recommended by the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence for trauma can have a beneficial effect in terms of reducing and even repairing the damage done, most children witnessing domestic violence will not be able to access such help. How right Julie Bindel is to draw attention to the need for an inquiry which might come up with recommendations to help prevent domestic violence on women and children happening in the first place.
Cairns Clery
Consultant family psychotherapist, London

As Jeremy Hunt links the crisis in hospital A&E departments with GPs opting out of out-of-hours care (GPs hit out at Hunt as he attacks ‘inaccessible’ surgeries, 23 May), I would like to put the matter into perspective. For most of my career as a GP, I was contracted to the NHS to provide care for my patients 24 hours a day, seven days a week, 52 weeks a year. If I wished to take time off for holidays or even if I was ill, it was my responsibility to find cover. This was usually facilitated by forming a partnership with other GPs in a group practice or paying for a locum. This worked well, although it was still not unusual to work all day, be out of bed most of the night and work all the following day. However, as an increasing proportion of graduates from medical schools were women, who wished for more family-friendly hours, vacancies in general practice became harder to fill, particularly in inner cities.
The government at the time could not risk areas of the country being without medical cover, so they had to find a way of attracting doctors to general practice. This involved giving them the choice of opting out of out-of-hours cover. To do this they had to come up with a figure that represented the proportion of a GP’s remuneration accounting for their out-of-hours work, something that successive review bodies had fought shy of. By comparing other NHS professionals with no such commitment, such as dentists, it was found that GPs were paid very little for it. When GPs were told how much they would lose by opting out, it was hardly surprising that a large majority did so.
The responsibility for providing out-of-hours care fell to the primary care trusts, which in many cases contracted it out to private companies, with the results that we see today. GPs had for half a century provided the service for next to nothing, so it is hardly fair to blame them for the failings of a system that now relies so heavily on profit.
Dr John Davies
Kirkby-in-Cleveland, North Yorkshire
• One of the basic factors underlying the out-of-hours and A&E problems has been ignored by commentators and the press: that the UK has probably the lowest doctor-patient ratio in Europe. In 2010, that was 2.6 doctors per 1,000 people. France had 3.3, Germany 3.6, Sweden 3.7 and the OECD average 3.1. The BMA is the doctors’ trade union, its quiet influence enormous in operating a closed-shop principle. The gullible Labour minister of health in 2004 fell for its PR about “quality” rather than numbers. It is the case that our structure of nursing is different from that of other European countries, but nurses, no matter how highly trained, do not compensate for the deficiency in medical training numbers, resulting in deficiency in GPs and in almost every specialty. We need to train at least 30% more doctors.I expect howls of sanctimonious indignation from the BMA. It is good at denial.
JD Manson
London
• If GPs think they enjoy popular support, they may be in for a shock. Everyone complains about the difficulty of making an appointment, which often entails phoning at 8am several days in a row. It’s not uncommon for a receptionist to suggest visiting A&E if you need a same-day consultation. A pre-booked appointment with a doctor of choice can mean a wait of six weeks at my practice. Many people work weekends, bank holidays and unsocial hours, but not GPs. As their pay has increased, so their availability has declined. My local surgery has been closed for four days in a row in successive weeks for the past two Christmases and New Year periods, which then leaves a backlog of demand to clear when they reopen. I voiced these complaints to a GP and her reply was that people expect a lot of something they don’t pay for. Isn’t it time GPs approached the situation with a little more humility andrecognised that they’re providing an essential service, not doing us a favour?
Jo Hillier
London
• The government justified its NHS reforms by saying that doctors were the best people to run the services instead of professional managers. So how does this square with its attacks on GPs blaming them for the problems in A&E by negotiating a contract which damages patients?
Ian Reissmann
Henley-on-Thames, Oxfordshire
• It’s taken a long time to ask the obvious question “if the doctors do the commissioning, who does the doctoring?” (GPs threaten to quit NHS commissioning so that they can concentrate on patients, 24 May). So now, what about an answer.
Derek Haselden
Ross-on-Wye, Herefordshire

Frank Large (Letters, 24 May) is worried that writing down the distance to the stars would involve so many zeroes that the editor would not allow it. Let’s try it. The distance from Frank to the edge of the observable universe is about 46bn light years (nine zeroes) away. A light year is around 6tn miles (12 zeroes). That makes around 275,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 miles (21 zeroes). And if the paper has room for one more zero, Frank could go there and back five times over. If the paper is pushed for space, we could think outside the box (as cliches seem to be de rigueur) and write this larger distance as 2.75 × 1024 (one zero).
Chris Coghill
Oxford
• Your correspondent (Letters, 25 May) promotes John McCrae’s In Flanders Fields as an anti-war poem, but surely the third verse exhorting the comrades of the dead to “take up our quarrel with the foe” suggests the opposite.
Michael Clayton
Wisbech, Cambridgeshire
• Can I be the first of this year’s firsts? Toadstools sprouted overnight in our garden on 22 May. Who’s going to tell them they’re four months early?
Joyce Hawthorn
Kendal, Cumbria
• Are there any non-bustling market towns (Letters, 25 May)?
David Halliday
London
• Why are previews always “sneak”?
Elizabeth Swinbank
York

Independent:

Amid the horror of the Woolwich killings, politicians from all shades of the political spectrum appear to be agreed on one thing: whatever the grievances of the suspects, their actions cannot be justified by British foreign policy.
But the political establishment is in denial. There is a world of difference between justifying an action and explaining it. To seek to immediately shut down a debate on why our soldiers are killing people in different parts of the Muslim world in our name, is to play into the hands of people who commit atrocities on our soil. Indeed, to refuse to discuss these issues looks as if we have something to hide.
We should try to understand why a small section of the British Muslim community identifies more with citizens of other countries to the extent they advocate murder on our shores, and challenge this dangerous ideology.
To do this, we must confront and counteract their ideas about our foreign policy, and not refuse to enter into such a debate for fear of looking as if we are accepting justifications or excuses. By doing so, we stand a much better chance of exposing their ideas, and marginalising them, both inside and outside the British Muslim community.
Eventually, we will have to talk to such people, just as we have talked to other “terrorists”, such as the IRA.
Dr Shazad Amin
Sale, Greater Manchester
The Woolwich suspects were clear about their objective, “to start a war in London”, creating enmity between British citizens. Now, the Muslim community needs to help solve the problem within its ranks, as they suffer the backlash.
That is the purpose of a small minority of Muslims, and if their “victories” are to be denied, it is essential that the majority take a stand and “out” such individuals to the authorities.
If the Muslim community fails to do this then it becomes a collaborator. If the community cannot determine whether it is prepared to give up those intent on causing violent dissent, then the mosques that fail to report those people to the authorities should be closed.
Alan Stedall
Birmingham
Woolwich may have altered the course of British politics. It was also an attack on Queen, country and above all, freedom, to which David Cameron issued a robust retort. The allegations that the reaction betrayed a “racist” agenda are nonsense (letters, 25 May).
The Prime Minister’s statesmanlike response has surely silenced the backbench murmurings against his leadership, albeit temporarily. This leaves potential challengers and Ed Miliband sitting on the sidelines.
The Prime Minister’s decorum in the wake of the tragedy also made a telling contrast with the Mayor of London’s attempt to promote his own political agenda.
With the challenge of the Syrian crisis looming and his NHS reforms faltering, Mr Cameron has less than a year to prove he is more than a one-term Prime Minister.
Anthony Rodriguez
Staines Upon Thames,  Middlesex
 
The GPs of  today, and of yesterday
I think Dr Clare Gerada (Voices, 23 May) overstates her case by saying, “We routinely see up to 60 patients on a daily basis”. Giving an average of 10 minutes per patient, that represents 10 hours of surgery time a day. Few in this part of the world will believe this.
Some years ago, when a previous government wanted to create super-surgeries, the Family Doctor panel of the BMA put out a leaflet stating their belief in the importance of the relationship between family doctor and patient.
Alas, this does not extend to night time and weekends, when patients never know who they might have to deal with. Given that uncertainty, is there any wonder that they go straight to A&E for attention?
Robert Hopkinson
Wolsingham, Co Durham
I entirely agree with the Secretary of State for Health that the problem with A&E is related to the opting out of “on-call” care by GPs. But the problem goes further back than the last extraordinary pay rise for GPs.
I worked as a GP for 27 years and retired in 1998. I was happy to do my fair share of out-of-hours cover. I was a believer in continuity of care, and GPs covering their own practice out of hours was an important part of that.
But the authorities did not share this view and we were paid what we considered a pittance for the night and weekend work we did. It was little wonder that younger GPs were likely to take any opportunity to relieve them of this duty. Before I retired, my partners took this route and joined a co-operative. I didn’t follow them on a point of principle.
I kept a record of all the out-of-hours visits that I had done between 1991 and 1998: a total of 1,117. I tried to analyse them to determine how many patients I had saved from making an unnecessary visit to A&E or an unnecessary 999 call.
I presented this to the partners at a clinical meeting mainly to illustrate why we should be paid more for the visits. Only 120 of those 1,117 (10 per cent) were referred to hospital, meaning the rest I could advise and/or treat myself.
Knowing many of the patients and families was a considerable advantage, as was having access to the notes of those of my partners. Apart from visiting, I can think of numerous occasions when a word of advice to a family over the phone had been enough, (plus giving them the option to phone again if needed, and they knew they would speak to the same doctor), and often no follow-up visit or even treatment was needed. I concluded that the GP is the perfect person to do the initial “triage”.
Dr Grahame Randall
Liphook, Hampshire
 
We should use a stand-by airport
Simon Calder (25 May) is wrong to link the extensive flight delays on Friday to the constant calls for more infrastructure (ie runways). All that is required is the equivalent of a motorway hard shoulder, a nearby civilian or military airport prepared for emergency landings.
This would have the extra benefit of not requiring the stricken plane to fly back across central London, which surely only adds to the risk of disaster?
Andy Spring
London SE5
Your coverage of an ailing British Airways flight returning to London Heathrow included a map of its route. If accurate, it raises two significant questions: first, why did the aircraft not divert to Stansted, which was almost underneath the revised flightpath?
Second, why was a malfunctioning aircraft with a full load of fuel, allowed to circle back and fly over central London, the most densely populated area of the country?
Ian McBain
Loughton, Essex
 
Pros and cons of the EU
The pro-EU campaigners seem to forget a simple fact when howling about the “loss” of business if UK were to leave the EU. We would still remain members of the EEA just like Norway, Liechtenstein and Iceland. Switzerland is slightly different but has a close arrangement with the EU. Being outside the EU did not have much impact on Iceland’s banking sector a few years ago.
As a member of the EEA, we would enjoy many of our present EU membership advantages plus regaining control of our EEZ. We would still have to adopt many EU directives into national law, but would have more choice over which ones. We would lose voting rights, but as many EU decisions are by QMV, we probably would not lose much.
Colin Stone
Oxford
The business elite who wish to stay in the EU fail to answer how Britain can protect its borders as a member of the EU. As a member, we cannot prevent Britain being used as the dumping ground for Europe and the world`s surplus populations.
We have a welfare budget which has risen since 2010 from £194bn to £220bn. The UK Government fails to publish how much of this rise is attributable to the ever-rising number of immigrants claiming benefits.
T C Bell
Penrith, Cumbria
 
Blindness or a cunning plot?
I wonder if George Osborne’s reputation as an astute politician might be justified. He and his fellow neo-liberals are possessed with an extreme-right-wing hatred of what they refer to the State and we might think of as the public realm.
That ideological disgust extends to include welfare, or, particularly, the NHS. The only explanation for Osborne’s persistence in economic policies which have been proven not to work and never will is that they create the circumstances under which the extreme right can argue for curtailing expenditure in the public realm (except for Trident) and which will allow for the destruction of the NHS in particular.
Michael Rosenthal
Banbury, Oxfordshire
 
A class act
The apparent scepticism of Ukip and the Tory right over climate change suggests that the British education system has lamentably failed. Otherwise, why do so many fail to understand scientific research? The Government could easily introduce scientific research classes within weeks. Sadly, I doubt it will, being scared of upsetting Ukip’s voters.
David Eagar
Manningtree, Essex
 
The rump UK
Your correspondents need not worry about a name for the remainder of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland if or when Scotland secedes. The constitutionally correct name would be the United Kingdom of England and Northern Ireland. As ever, Wales doesn’t get a look in, having been annexed to the then-Kingdom of England by the Laws in Wales Acts 1535 and 1542.
Tom Flynn
Edinburgh
 
An idea blossoms
On my rail commute from New Southgate to Finsbury Park I pass miles of green embankments. The plant life seems to consist of grass, nettles and weeds. Why don’t councils plant wild flowers in such areas and stimulate insect populations? It would make the journey a bit more pleasant.
Josh Cluderay
London N11
 
That’s for sure
A C Grayling (Voices, 24 May) rightly praises the “careful estimations of a scientific world” in which “nothing is certain”. Yet he appears to have no problem claiming with certainty that there is no God.
T Hewlett
Widnes, Cheshire

Times:

Judges should be required to hold advocates who stray beyond acceptable bounds in contempt and this should be enshrined in legislation
Sir, Part of the blame for the dreadful Stafford child sex abuse trial, rightly castigated in your leading article (May 23), attaches to the Government. In 1999, Parliament enacted section 28 of the Youth Justice and Criminal Evidence Act. In theory, this enables the cross-examination of vulnerable witnesses to be held in private, ahead of trial, and to be video-recorded. This allows them to drop out of the proceedings at that point and also — as in the Stafford case — when the first trial is aborted, spares them from having to go through the ordeal again.
For the past 14 years successive governments, to their cumulative shame, have failed to bring this provision into force, even for the limited purpose of conducting an experiment. The latest reason given is the relatively small cost of the necessary equipment for recording.
Might the scandal of the Stafford case induce the Minister of Justice to find the necessary money?
Professor J. R. Spencer, QC
Cambridge
Sir, Your report of the abuse trial at Stafford Crown Court (May 23) reveals serious deficiencies not only in the trial process but also in the regulation of lawyers. That a trial about abuse should permit emotional abuse of child witnesses is among the most serious indictments one can imagine of our legal system.
Since any girl under 16 cannot have given lawful consent to sex why was evidence relating to alleged previous sexual conduct considered admissible? All barristers and their instructing solicitors are officers of the court — to avoid repetition of these events I suggest as an interim measure the Lord Chief Justice issues a practice direction to both judges and advocates reminding them of this and emphasising that one aspect of their responsibility to the court is to ensure that witnesses are treated with respect, courtesy and due regard for their vulnerability.
Judges should be required to hold advocates who stray beyond acceptable bounds in contempt. Parliament should enshrine this in legislation, together with a requirement for advocates to swear on oath at the start of a trial that they will act in accordance with these and all other obligations deriving from their status as officers of the court.
In the longer term I would suggest only judges and counsel with training in the handling of child witnesses be permitted to take part in such cases.
Trevor Knowles
Retired director of social services
Burgess Hill, W Sussex
Sir, The fault in this case lay with the trial judge in allowing the seven defendants to be represented separately. The evidence showed that the accused acted as a group and as a group they should have been represented, unless one or other of them broke ranks and created a conflict of interest among the members of that group.
Roger Everest
Defence Counsel, 1969-2009
Pontyclun, Rhondda Cynon Taf
Sir, After reading William Austin in his Letters from London in 1802 and Richard Whately in Elements of Rhetoric (1840), it would appear that little has changed in the way barristers are allowed to behave in our courts. There is a clear need for many procedural reforms and one of them would be the introduction of the right of objection by the opposing counsel such as exists in America and with which we are all familiar from films and television.
Peter Ivens
London WC1H

All our efforts at liberal multi-cultural tolerance are being cynically used by radical Islam to attack our society’s core values
Sir, Dr T. Hargey , the Imam of the Oxford Muslim Congregation, condemns the killing of Drummer Lee Rigby “without reservation” (letters, May 25) and then goes on to imply that it was Tony Blair’s invasion of Iraq that was responsible for it.
It is this kind of double-speak, stoking the fires of resentment against the West, that make some of us wonder whether moderate Muslims are doing enough to combat the extremists within their own ranks.
Stan Rosenthal
Haywards Heath, W Sussex
Sir, Dr T. Hargey relates the Woolwich brutality to Tony Blair’s illegal invasion of Iraq. He must recognise that opposition to the British forces engagement in Iraq and other places is not restricted to Muslims alone.
A majority of the British public of all faiths and persuasions was opposed to this involvement, but one’s opposition must be expressed through debates, education and lobbying of the parliament; urging the Government to withdraw troops.
The difficulty for the naive follower is that the preacher convinces him that it is his personal, individual duty to fight the perceived injustice of invasion and act in the manner we have witnessed in Woolwich.
Nikhil Kaushik
Wrexham

As a critically rigorous, academic discipline, Religious Studies can benefit a child’s academic imagination and understanding
Sir, In an increasingly complex, even fragmented world, it is the birthright of every school student to become literate in the ideas and beliefs that are shaping the future; Ruth Gledhill’s report on the decline in public understanding of religion (May 24) is a telling indicator of what an opportunity there is to enrich all school pupils with a modern, objective appreciation of religious and non-religious views of life.
When events reported in the media stir up public debate, a mature democracy might well argue that its future citizens should be well versed in an informed understanding of their fellow neighbour. As a Religious Studies (RS) teacher, I find it humbling that so many students engage in discussion with each other so attentively, positively and creatively.
As a critically rigorous, academic discipline, RS can have great benefit for a child’s academic imagination, but how much more impact will that individual have as an adult in a modern society that needs real, considerate dialogue.
R. E. Lee
Head of Religious Studies,
Trinity School, Croydon

3

In the face of difficulties for any adults who seek an assisted death, the need to support their children must not be forgotten
Sir, My senior colleagues are to be commended for supporting legislation that will increase the choices that a number of adults can make about their own destiny (letter, May 18). However, because parental death is well recognised as a trigger for childhood difficulties, it is to be hoped that the regulatory guidance that will follow enactment of the proposed Bill will require the provision of adequate support for the children of anyone seeking an assisted death.
In the face of difficulties for any adults, the needs of their children must not be forgotten.
Dr Peter Green
Designated Doctor and Consultant for Child Safeguarding,
Wandsworth Clinical Commissioning Group and St George’s Hospital,
London SW12

Telegraph:

SIR – I read an article in a country magazine recently about the red kite, proclaiming its re-introduction to be a “great success story”. I don’t agree.
We know that this bird, albeit beautiful, was persecuted to near extinction from the British Isles at the end of the 19th century –and perhaps for good reason.
This large raptor has a voracious appetite for the same food prey as our delicately balanced population of barn, tawny and little owls and kestrels while also preying on leverets and taking the chicks of ground-nesting birds including pheasant, partridge, duck and lapwing. In the Chilterns, red kites are now more readily seen than our once common, and infinitely more melodious, sparrow, starling, and skylark. These were abundant in our childhoods but their numbers continue to decline.
Millions of us feed songbirds in our gardens during the winter and early summer in the hope of arresting their decline, yet I find the practice of those who feed kites in their gardens in order to enjoy an aerobatic display, somehow rather distasteful. In the same way, I feel uncomfortable about a bird that has no fear of man whatsoever and will sit tight in a tree however loudly one shouts or claps one’s hands.
The countryside, and towns for that matter, are overrun with protected raptors and the last thing that our embattled wildlife needs is yet another.
Paul Sargeantson
Britwell Salome, Oxfordshire
SIR – Words struggle to describe my deep anger at the audacity of the cowardly attack on our off-duty soldier in broad daylight in Woolwich. This has been an attack on every one of us and the nation stands united in its abhorrence and disgust.
But hard lessons need to be learned about who knew what about the radical ideology of the murderous thugs who perpetrated this crime. It is alleged that at least one of them was already known for his overtly jihadi views, and we need to know whether preemptive action could have indeed been taken by the security agencies.
This attack has also sadly exposed the failure of British Muslim organisations and the complacent attitude of previous governments in cosying up to them. I have yet to see a single British Muslim organisation or educational institution that confronts in a comprehensive manner the pernicious anti-British propaganda that is rife among new converts to Islam in schools, higher-education institutes, prisons and other social circles.
Whether in mosques or madrasas, British Muslim youth need to learn the fundamental democratic values of Britain and its core national ethos. When it comes to the internal security of this country, every Muslim youth should be a soldier and a watchful guard.
They need to learn that members of our Armed Forces heroically fulfil the tasks entrusted to them and that foreign policy is an expression of our national interests enacted via legitimate means.
Related Articles
The resurgent red kite is a menace to other species
26 May 2013
Dr Lu’ayy Minwer Al-Rimawi
Visiting Fellow, Harvard Law School
Director, Master’s Programme in Islamic Law, BPP Law School
SIR – I’ve heard many prominent politicians, including Boris Johnson, the Mayor of London, make the point that Wednesday’s horrific atrocity has nothing to do with normative Islam. I am sympathetic to these statements, since in a largely peaceful, tolerant British society, the last thing we need is the start of sectarian violence.
Nevertheless, I do hope that behind the calming words, there is a re-assessment by those in power of the nature of the threat posed by fundamentalist Islam to our (including American and Western European) society.
Islam is a private and peaceful religion to most in Britain, but to many adherents, particularly in the Middle East and parts of Africa, it is a dominating “way of life” largely intolerant of other religious beliefs and practices.
Warren Braham
Kenton, Middlesex
SIR – There are fanatics posing as followers in all religions, and all religions at some period or another have had blood on their hands. I pray that British people won’t use this incident as an opportunity mindlessly to attack the Muslim community. To do so would only create more hatred and spark further violence.
As Lord Reid of Cardowan warns us, we should not play into the perpetrators’ hands but remember that the “dividing line is not between Islam and non-Islam. It is between the terrorists and everyone else.”
Yvette Durham
Bexbach, Saarland, Germany
SIR – As an advanced society we believe in justice, which protects the innocent as it condemns the guilty. The perpetrators of this crime will face justice, and then we must move on. In treating them as we would any other criminals, we will show those who would emulate them in the name of martyrdom that we are not afraid, that we will not be terrorised and that they are not divine. They are criminals and will be treated as such.
We must swallow our anger and offer our condolences to the friends and family of Lee Rigby. Meanwhile his killers will feel the full weight of justice as they live long, lonely lives, far from the society they wronged.
Connor Simmons
Loughton, Essex
SIR – Did the news networks, in their unflinching reporting of the terrible murder of a serving soldier, not think about his family? I had to turn the coverage off as I deemed the images gruesome, hugely intrusive and deeply insensitive.
Kim Halliday
Newport, Essex
David Cameron must stand up to the EU
SIR – With France as well as Britain in haste to introduce gay “marriage”, a cynic would suspect that the EU has somehow ordered such a redefinition of what has been accepted for thousands of years.
With the Chancellor being outvoted and Britain now supinely acceding to Brussels’ demand for an additional £1.4 billion to the EU budget, it is no wonder long-standing Tory supporters are losing all faith in David Cameron’s logic.
If the Marriage Bill is forced through then the Tories will deserve to be on the opposition benches in the next parliament. Mr Cameron needs to show a bit of backbone. Stating categorically that Britain will now deduct £1.4 billion from our contribution to next year’s EU coffers will ensure that he is listened to a bit more carefully by the EU elite in the future.
B J Colby
Portishead, Somerset
SIR – Re-negotiating our EU status is a non-starter, as the re-instatement of Mr Cameron’s much-vaunted budget cuts clearly shows. For all his professed euro-scepticism, the impression remains that he would rather see Britain in the EU under Labour than out, under the Conservatives.
Chris Jones
Croydon, Surrey
SIR – The in-out EU referendum has become necessary, and most urgent, because of the lack of persuasive debate from any of the established parties.
These parties only pretend to be different, arguing on smaller details, and continue to mimic each other on foreign policy, defence, business, economics, and even on education and health.
It is not Ukip that has only one policy, it is the established parties, who, in claiming their so-called centre ground, appear to be afraid to discuss their convictions or debate the rights and wrongs of any issue. And so they are left with only one policy – to do exactly what the overseas government in Brussels tells them.
Doug Knox
Sunderland, Co Durham
SIR –David Cameron has lost the plot; his promise of a referendum is a sop to defer facing the electorate as long as possible. He is a Europhile at heart, and will continue to vacillate and squirm over this, as his past record shows.
Likewise, his determination to push through same-sex marriage legislation is seen as further proof of his detachment from reality; having to rely on Labour’s support for this is truly demeaning.
Michael Zanker
Glenfield, Leicestershire
Crowning glory
SIR – As head of the Church of England, our monarch presides over an organisation that undoubtedly has falling support.
On the other hand, as the leader of the British nation, the monarch rules over and enjoys the support of an increasingly diverse people of all faiths.
How fitting therefore that our new Archbishop has suggested that all Christian denominations and representatives of other faiths should play a part in the coronation of any future monarch (report, May 19).
Duncan Rayner
Sunningdale, Berkshire
Keeping the press free
SIR – Jacob Rees-Mogg’s article in support of press freedom (“If the press isn’t free, you aren’t”, Opinion, May 19), reminded me of the words of the Greek statesman Demosthenes (c.384-322 BC): “There is one safeguard known generally to the wise, which is an advantage and security to all, but especially to democracies against despots – suspicion”. I think this is apt in light of Mr Rees-Mogg’s article.
Phillip Potter
Farncombe, Surrey
Local war historians
SIR – Pam Clatworthy (Letters, May 19) is not alone in researching the lives of the men from her village who died in the First World War. I am investigating the 108 men of my old school who made the ultimate sacrifice. The names on the school memorial now mean something and I feel I know the men involved. It is hoped that my research will be presented in book form in time for the centenary and any profits from the sale will be donated to the Friends of the school.
John Beck
Epsom Downs, Surrey
Suit you, sir
SIR – Esther Rantzen (Opinion, May 19) thanks M&S for rekindling the love she previously had for them. But she only speaks for women.
Years ago I wrote to the managing director of M&S to say that there were thousands of frustrated male “peacocks” desperate to find well-styled colourful suits and jackets. Walk into any M&S branch today and look at the suits sections – they still look like funeral parlours.
Give us reds, blues, greens, yellows, purples – in fact, all the colours of the rainbow!
Richard Ward
Kew, Surrey
HS2 will strain our energy resources
SIR – In Andrew Gilligan’s article on HS2 (Gilligan on Sunday, May 19) he says, “Ministers have admitted that HS2, which will use large amounts of electricity, will fail to reduce CO2 emissions and may well increase them.”
Given the current state of play on likely energy supplies in the future, where will these huge amounts of electricity come from? Will we see trains stranded between stations due to power cuts?
Maureen O’Connor
Fareham, Hampshire
SIR – Currently, rail travel from Stoke-on-Trent to London takes under one and a half hours. Can the overwhelming cost to the country of HS2 (over £34 billion) really be justified?
Our local community, only one of many of lovely homes and ancient woodlands, will be utterly devastated. A fair compensation cost would run into millions and the damage to our countryside never reversed.
Surely it is better for everyone to update the existing rail facilities, as suggested by Sir Richard Branson?
The evidence shows that HS2 will only benefit the terminals, leaving the large areas in between worse off.
Patricia Bradley
Whitmore, Staffordshire
Drones over Ulster
SIR – The Police Service of Northern Ireland is to buy nine drones for the huge security operation at the G8 summit in County Fermanagh in June and afterwards to combat terrorism and crime.
When will we see the first armed drones in Northern Ireland airspace, and when will the first innocent person be killed by one? Innocent people are being killed in Yemen and northern Pakistan in particular, and many people in those areas claim they are living in constant fear and anxiety. Do we really believe this will never happen in Northern Ireland? There’s more to drones than simply saving on the costs that arise from the deployment of helicopters.
Louis Shawcross
Hillsborough, Co Down
Unorthodox deterrent
SIR – Some years ago I was in a pub in a remote part of the Scottish Highlands. One of the locals was chatting to me and mentioned the midge problem and that the best deterrent was brown sugar, rubbed all over one’s face.
“It stops them biting, does it?” I asked, and with guffaws from his pals he replied, “No, but it rots their teeth!”
Ray Byrne
Cheadle Hulme, Cheshire

Irish Times:

Sir, – Dr Anne Dee’s comments regarding the scale of the obesity crisis in Ireland are extremely worrying (Home News, May 23rd). The growth in overweight and obesity levels over the past 20 years is a problem of epic proportions which has yet to be significantly addressed by government. The affordability of foods high in salt, fat and sugar and the decline in general activity levels has led to what is referred to now as a “obesogenic environment”.
This epidemic is not only damaging our general health and wellbeing, but it is also posing a massive burden on a struggling public Exchequer. SafeFood estimates that the overweight and obesity crisis is costing the island of Ireland approximately €1.16 billion every year. In addition, SafeFood also state that this is a conservative estimate.
Unfortunately, succcessive governments have neglected to tackle this problem with the urgency it requires. I would not be so harsh however as Dr Dee in stating that the Fine Gael-Labour coalition has taken no action on this matter, as I do believe James Reilly is making important moves in the right direction to bring this problem under control. Unfortunately, the Government is being obstructed at almost every turn by extremely powerful and well-resourced organisations, such as Food and Drinks Association Ireland, which are are spending massive amounts of money to stop the introduction of measures aimed at curbing the rise in overweight and obesity levels. These included measures such as calorie counts on menus and traffic light warnings on food labels.
In order to effect change in a meaningful way, it is absolutely essential that Government, interest groups and communities throughout Ireland come together and stand up to these vested interests. It must become a priority if we are to halt this epidemic. – Yours, etc,
ALAN KEEGAN
Howth Road,
Raheny,

Sir, – Your article “Tobacco smoke is biggest home pollutant in Ireland, EPA study finds” (Breaking News, May 21st) ignores some glaring facts that undermine the study itself.
First, this study measured inside air quality in a mere 11 homes in Ireland over a couple of months, but is being touted as a justification for looking at regulating smoking in our very homes. To put that in context, the largest study ever done into the effects of environmental tobacco smoke (ETS) in indoor environments was carried out on 118,000 Americans over a 38-year period. This then was the most significant examination into the alleged problem, but it was ignored because Prof Kabut and Prof Enstrom discovered that “ETS is of little or no consequence.”
That tiny sampling and the absence of a “control group,” makes the EPA study meaningless and without credibility. Rather, it appears to be an effort at sensationalism and as such, just a cheap shot at the 1.3 million of us who choose to smoke of our free will. – Yours, etc,
JOHN MALLON,
Forest Éireann,

Sir, – Arthur Beesley’s article (“Scrutiny of Ireland begins to bite in Apple tax inquiry”, May 22nd) reminds us of Ireland’s role in an international system of tax avoidance.
While the current spotlight is on Ireland’s role in reducing corporate taxes earned in a handful of developed countries, multiples of that – an estimated €120 billion – are lost to developing countries each year through aggressive tax avoidance facilitated in part by financial institutions in European countries.
EU Foreign affairs and development ministers will meet this week to make an important decision on the role the EU will play in global efforts to eradicate poverty and stop climate change. This will feed into a larger process taking place at the UN, beginning this September at an event co-hosted by Ireland, to review the Millennium Development Goals.
There is a consensus across civil society in Ireland, Europe and the developing world that this UN framework must be centrally based on human rights, equality and good governance.
But it is now also clear that to end world poverty we must address tax justice. Put simply, through our role in the international tax avoidance system, Ireland and Europe are responsible for denying governments the world over of the revenues they need to tackle poverty in their own countries. – Yours, etc,
HANS ZOMER,

Sir, – I was very pleased to see Peter McIlwaine’s letter (May 23rd). I am sure there are many mistakes in the transcription of the census returns of 1901 and 1911.
In the course of looking through them I found a glaring mistake in the 1911 census, Padraig Mac Piarais was shown as Patrick Henry Pearse. On checking the actual document it was clear that he had shown his name in the Irish form and had actually signed the form Padraig Mac Piarais. Another error was two OKennedy boys in Dublin shown as Corniae Cas and Fergus Lady. The correct names, as could be seen from the actual return, were Cormac Cas and Fergus Tadhg. I reported these errors several times over a year ago.
Eventually I got a phone call from a lady in the Archives. I told her my complaint and was astonished to hear that the transcription was done in India. She also said that due to lack of funds little could be done to rectify the faults. On checking this morning, I see that Patrick Henry Pearse has been removed but the correct name has not been entered. The incorrect OKennedy names are still there.
I am afraid that the same problems also arise with the transcription of names from the church records. I reported a mistake in my grandfather’s baptism record, but nothing has been done to correct it. Surely, given all the unemployed graduates in Ireland, some could be employed on a temporary basis and at a reasonable salary to correct the mistakes that have been reported by myself and, I am sure, many others. – Yours, etc,
BRIAN P O CINNEIDE,

Sir, – Instead of abolishing the Seanad, could we please abolish Dublin City Council? It costs far too much and many of its decisions are not in the public interest. For instance: the disgraceful decision to privatise bin collections in Dublin city in 2012; and the recent mad decision to resurface Grafton Street over 18 months at a cost of €4 million (Business, May 24th). – Yours, etc,
PATRICK O’BYRNE,
Shandon Crescent,
Phibsborough, Dublin 7.

Irish Independent:

Madam – I would like to strongly object to the publishing of John Crown’s hate-filled diatribe against Catholics in Ireland (Sunday Independent, May 19, 2013). His language was reminiscent of the type of phraseology that has preceded persecution throughout history.
Also in this section
Reject the dirty shirt
We need public transport
TD resign? You must be joking
As a Catholic, I felt not only insulted and deeply wronged but threatened.
Kathy Sinnott,
Ballinhassig,
Co Cork
OFFENDED BY CHURCH BASHING
Madam – As a constant reader of your paper, I was shocked and very upset at the article by Prof John Crown (Sunday Independent, May 19, 2013). A large number of your readers are Catholic and must feel the same way as I do.
Catholic Church bashing is now very much the norm in Irish society. It is a pity that the Sunday Independent has joined in.
Our Constitution reflects the ethos of our people in its opening lines; we do not need this kind of invective from this man; he seems to an expert on everything, God help us.
The least you should do now is to apologise to your many offended readers.
Jim O’Sullivan,
Bantry,
Co Cork
APOLOGISE TO ALL IRISH CATHOLICS
Madam – I read with shock and amazement the article written by Prof John Crown (Sunday Independent, May 19, 2013) and wish to complain in the strongest possible way. As a member of the Catholic faith, I feel hurt and angered by the blatant hatred towards my faith present in this article. If this article had been levelled against any other group on the basis of race, religion, sexual orientation, gender, disability or age etc, there would be an outcry by the same media. It has offended numerous people of the Catholic faith.
I believe that an apology to all Catholics living in Ireland, from both the Sunday Independent and Prof John Crown is required
Sheelagh Hanly,
Co Roscommon
FALSE PREMISE OF CROWN ARTICLE
Madam – What an incredibly arrogant and intolerant article by Prof John Crown, (Sunday Independent, May 19, 2013), epitomised by his stated assumption of “thinking people” sharing his viewpoint.
It is outrageous of him to suggest that those who for reasons of conscience (which may indeed by informed by the teaching of the Catholic Church) oppose legislation on abortion are giving political allegiance to the Holy See (a different concept) and are disloyal to the State and its Constitution.
This is the same false premise which was used in past centuries to justify the oppression and in some cases execution of Catholics in these islands.
Prof Crown is the ideological successor to Thomas Cromwell.
Ciaran Connolly,
Raheny,
Dublin 5
The headline on last week’s article was not suggested by Prof Crown.
Letters Ed
BRUTON REPLY A DEMOCRATIC SIGN
Madam –It was democratic of your paper (Sunday Independent, May 19, 2013) to enable former Taoiseach John Bruton to reply to strong criticism of his views on austerity, as reported in the media
Many would agree with him on a sustainable economic model, that is realistic and protective of the environment worldwide. He gave an example of how a German uses 40 times the amount of water of the average Egyptian and that we can’t expect other countries to help us out, when their economies are under pressure too.
His main point is that as a country we are spending far more than what is coming in with a current deficit. Irish people, however, do feel justifiably angry at how the main Irish banks were bailed out and saved by our State’s reserve funds in 2009 and the banks have not been showing much leeway in return. The pressure on the country and its people seems all one-way since.
Austerity in practice has been hard on a good proportion of the Irish population. St Vincent de Paul has spent millions of euro helping people in the last three years.
People are not spending money as before in coffee shops and restaurants, the life-blood of small towns around the country. They are still closing. The Sunday Independent reported on what is happening in Dun Laoghaire.
Most people have seen incomes drop and nearly everything else going up in price. John wrote on the need for the world to not increase its populations and not be so greedy of our planet. And he is right on that.
But, there are tens of thousands of Irish people who are genuinely feeling the pressures of austerity. About 150,000 have emigrated in the last four years.
I like John Bruton, but do not always agree with his views. It is really bad timing to say that these years of austerity will be worth it in the end, as we still endure it.
As his former boss, Taoiseach Garret FitzGerald, said at a cabinet meeting in the Eighties, that is all very well in practice, but what about in theory?
Mary Sullivan,
Cork City
PROTEST AT NEXT YEAR’S EUROVISION
Madam – Having watched the Eurovision Song Contest, I wondered if we should just pull out of the competition next year.
But then, I thought, hold on a minute. Instead of throwing in the towel, why not use the contest to lodge a national protest at what the whole Eurovision set-up has become?
Remember that much-loved episode of Father Ted in which Ted and Dougal sing My Lovely Horse? In the same episode they get to sing in the Eurovision, and come last… a case of art imitating a future real life situation.
Next year, we could enter a song something along the lines of the one the Craggy Island clerics made famous. The theme would be all the more poignant given the horse-in-the-burger scare that gripped the nation, and much of Europe.
Naturally, the song would need different words to the Father Ted version and of course the title couldn’t be the same.
How about My Lovely Horse’s Ass?
John Fitzgerald,
Callan, Co Kilkenny
JOB ALLOWANCE IS NOT JOB BENEFIT
Madam –Your article “One in seven on the dole has never worked a day in their life” (Sunday Independent, May 19, 2013), contains inaccurate information which I feel needs to be clarified.
The reporter refers to ‘Jobseeker’s Benefit’ several times in the article as the €188 payment that the unemployed receive. The article states that one in seven people in this State has been on benefit all their lives without having worked a day in their lives – this is impossible.
Let me clarify this for you. Jobseeker’s Benefit is paid to those who have paid PRSI contributions and find themselves unemployed. It is only paid to those who have worked. It is paid at a rate dependent on the contributions that have been made. Not everyone would be in receipt of €188 per week. Jobseeker’s Benefit can be claimed at full rate, and, provided PRSI contributions have been made, it is paid for a total of nine months only.
Those in receipt of Jobseeker’s Benefit pay a tax of 20 per cent on the payment they receive. This is calculated by Revenue when they return to work and is applied by reducing the tax credits of the person who was in receipt of benefit.
I believe the reporter should have referred to Jobseeker’s Allowance in this article. This is a State payment given to the unemployed that is means tested. Those in receipt of this payment need never have worked a day in their lives, nor do they pay a tax of 20 per cent on it. If they ever started working, their tax credits would not be reduced.
Rebecca Dobson,
Roscommon
Irish Independent


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Classics 27th May 2013

I trot round the park today and listen to the Navy lark. I Oh dear, oh dear
Troutbridge is sent off to deliver the ambassador Sir Willowby Tod hunter-Brown and wife, but they forget to let him off the ship and brink him and his wife back again Priceless.
A quiet day off out to Temple Newsam to collect some classic Latin books, lovely old academic couple
We watch There Was a young lady efficiency expert is kidnapped by lovable rogues a wonderful old film
I win at Scrabble today, just and gets just under 400, Mary might get her revenge tomorrow, I hope.

Obituary:

Bill Pertwee
Bill Pertwee, who has died aged 86, made his name as the irascible ARP Warden Hodges in the 1970s BBC sitcom Dad’s Army; he also successfully featured in Round The Horne.

Bill Pertwee, who played ARP Warden Hodges in Dad’s Army, has died at the age of 86 
6:42PM BST 27 May 2013
As chief tormentor of the local Home Guard commander, Capt Mainwaring (Arthur Lowe), Warden Hodges proved far more of an irritant than the armed hordes of Nazi Germany which (almost) invariably left the citizens of Walmington-on-Sea in peace.
Dressed in the brief authority of wartime office, Hodges pulled rank at every opportunity to act as a one-man counterweight to the military might represented by Capt Mainwaring’s platoon. With the perfect put-down — Hodges riled Mainwaring by twitting him as “Napoleon” — Pertwee played the town’s tinpot dictator with total aplomb.

The show’s creators, David Croft and Jimmy Perry, were apt to use the same coterie of actors in all their television series, and so Pertwee followed his long-running part in Dad’s Army with a regular part of the policeman, PC Wilson, in You Rang M’Lord?, which ran for 26 episodes between 1988 and 1992.
Yet it was as Warden Hodges that Pertwee found his place in the public imagination. For away from the Home Guard parades and manoeuvres, the character was a humble high street greengrocer, as in thrall to (and in fact in awe of) the pompous bank manager – Mainwaring – as Cpl Jones (the butcher) and even Pte Fraser (the undertaker). And it was upon such satirical appreciation of the essentially English nuances of class that the huge success of Dad’s Army was built.
Related Articles
Bill Pertwee’s classic comedy
27 May 2013
William Desmond Anthony Pertwee was born on July 21 1926 at Amersham, Buckinghamshire, the youngest of three brothers. His father, who was of Huguenot descent (the family name originally having been Pertuis), had not followed his own father into farming, but made his living as an engineer working for a firm selling tarmacadam to councils. His mother had herself been born in Brazil.
In the early 1930s the family moved to Glasbury-on-Wye in Radnorshire, and then, as their fortunes faltered, to Colnbrook, near Windsor, Newbury, and finally Erith in Kent. There, Bill’s eldest brother joined the Atlas Preservative Company as export manager, the managing director being a 20-year-old Denis Thatcher, whose father owned the firm.
Bill was educated at a local convent and, following his father’s death, moved with his mother and brothers to Blackheath, south London. Evacuated at the outbreak of the Second World War to Sussex, he attended a local private school run by an eccentric called Felix Eames.
Another move, to Wilmington in Kent, landed him at Dartford Technical College, and in 1941 his eldest brother, who had joined the RAF, was killed when his aircraft crashed in Yorkshire while returning from a bombing mission over Germany.
After the family’s final move, to Westcliff-on-Sea, Bill found a place at Southend College and took a job at the Southend Motor and Aero Club, which before the war had repaired funfair rides and dodgem cars, but was then making parts for Spitfire cannons.
When the war ended, Pertwee was offered a job with Oxley Knox, a firm of City stockbrokers, but was sacked when he answered the office telephone with a facetious impression of the broadcaster Raymond Glendinning, only to find Mr Knox of Oxley Knox on the other end. An advertisement in The Daily Telegraph for salesmen vacancies at Burberry’s new sports department led to another job, but a family friend soon offered him a better one in his window and office cleaning business.
Throughout the late 1940s and early 1950s Pertwee developed his interest in showbusiness, becoming a regular at opening nights in the West End. In 1954 he became an assistant to his second cousin, the actor Jon Pertwee, and the following year he turned professional, joining a variety bill at Gorleston near Great Yarmouth on £6 a week.
As a performer his first big radio break came in the early 1960s as a regular in the comedy series Beyond Our Ken, starring Kenneth Horne, followed by Round The Horne. The latter achieved cult status, but after eight years Pertwee was abruptly dropped. He wrote to various television producers asking for work, and was used as a warm-up man on such shows as Hancock and Up Pompeii, before in 1968 David Croft offered him a few episodes as the Warden in Dad’s Army. The booking eventually lasted for nine years.
As well as the stage version of Dad’s Army (Shaftesbury, 1975) Pertwee also starred in the Ray Cooney farce There Goes The Bride, his first West End role, at the Piccadilly Theatre. In 1975 he was part of the Dad’s Army ensemble that took part in the Royal Variety Performance. In the 1980s he appeared in the Ray Cooney farces See How They Run and Run For Your Wife, which successfully toured in Canada.
Pertwee was the author of several books, the first of which, Promenades and Pierrots (1979) traced the history of seaside entertainment in Britain. A follow-up, By Royal Command (1981), looked at the links between the Royal family and showbusiness. His autobiography, A Funny Way To Make A Living, appeared in 1996.
Bill Pertwee married, in 1960, Marion Rose. She predeceased him, and he is survived by their son, Jon, who is also an actor.
Bill Pertwee, born July 21 1926, died May 27 2013

Guardian:

The antisocial behaviour, crime and policing bill is currently working its way through the House of Commons and receives its second reading on 10 June. It is our contention that this bill, as drafted, is flawed and will lead to a host of unintended consequences.
Our first cause for concern is section 1 (2), which defines antisocial behaviour as “conduct capable of causing nuisance or annoyance to any person”. With such a broad definition, it is tantamount to making everything illegal. At a time when police services are looking to utilise their resources effectively, this bill seems to be counterproductive as it is inviting those in dispute to seek the intervention of frontline police officers. The bill, however, does not just deal with events that have happened – as long as someone believes the potential for misbehaviour is there, he or she can seek a police officer’s assistance.
Our other cause for concern is section 1 (3), which provides the courts with the power to: “grant [an] injunction for the purpose of preventing the respondent from engaging in antisocial behaviour”. Without any kind of definition, this will lead to magistrates – and in the first instance police officers and PCSOs – making decisions on what they personally deem unacceptable behaviour. It is our contention that the provisions of the bill have the potential to be misapplied, if not abused, just because the person in the dock has a different belief.
Many naturists already have the perception that the Public Order Act 1986 – introduced as an anti-riot measure – are being misapplied against them. These instances are frequently overturned at a higher court. It is our belief that the potential for a miscarriage of justice is higher with this new flawed bill than is currently endured by naturists.
Edmund Burke said in 1780 that “bad laws are the worst sort of tyranny”. We contend that this bill is bad law in the making, and would urge readers to inform their MPs of the need for amendment.
Reg Barlow
Chairman, Naturist Action Group

The argument against the public display of soft porn (Retailers told to remove lads’ mags or face test case, 27 May) appears predicated on the premise that offence is to be avoided at whatever cost to other freedoms – a clearly absurd position given there is no limit to what can cause offence to someone. Is it the pro-censorship argument that any offensive printed material should not be visible? Well, I often find the headlines of tabloids to be offensive, or, if that is somehow to be missing the point, what about the images displayed in bodybuilding or slimming magazines? When it comes to censorship be careful what you wish for.
Graham Hall
Penarth, Vale of Glamorgan
• Those customers who, like me, find the display of pornographic newspaper and magazine covers offensive and demeaning may wish to join my silent protest. Quietly turn the stack of papers over, leaving the back cover uppermost.
Louise Braithwaite
Redditch, Worcestershire

As an independent member of the Data Access Advisory Group, which provides independent scrutiny of the Health and Social Care Information Centre, I, with other members, have to review applications for anonymous information (Health firms can pay to see NHS patient data, 17 May). The group has to decide whether there is any risk that the data provided could be manipulated in order to reveal the identity of individual patients. If there is such a risk, the group refers the request to the Confidentiality Advisory Group in the Health Research Authority, where legally all such requests must be considered. In each case, we enter into strict agreements with those customers who have applied for information, to make sure they preserve people’s privacy. I have never experienced confidential patient information being “up for sale”. As a doctor (now retired from clinical practice), I know how important it is to respect patient confidentiality if we are to maintain the trust of our patients to provide us with all the information required to provide good care. There are important legal and ethical safeguards that ensure this and never – as your article implied – casual or secret routes for commercial companies to break these rules.
Patrick Coyle
Swansea

David Lammy is right to focus attention on the growing alienation of young people and the need for concerted action across ethnic lines (Why are young British men drawn to radicalisation?, 25 May). In recent evidence to the education select committee, Michael Gove disavowed the need for the country to have a youth policy. It does need one – and one which does not simply respond belatedly to shocking events but comprehensively helps young people towards acquiring the skills, values and experiences for leading better lives.
Tom Wylie
Former CEO, National Youth Agency
• David Lammy dismisses “the suggestion” the Woolwich terrorist attack “was a direct consequence of British foreign policy” as “superficially compelling”. What, then, to make of the 2010 testimony from the head of MI5 between 2002 and 2007, who said “our involvement in Iraq, for want of a better word, radicalised a whole generation of young people” and “substantially” raised the terror threat to the UK?
Ian Sinclair
London
• “… not the time … to debate foreign policy” (Comment, 25 May). As one of the thousands who marched in London to protest against Blair’s war in Iraq, and were totally ignored, I now wonder if we should all have brandished meat-cleavers to gain the government’s attention. And thanks, Martin Rowson, for that wonderful cartoon on “You’re going to lose”.
Rev John Miller
Edinburgh
• Among Theresa May’s proposals to counter Islamist extremism (Report, 27 May), a broadcasting ban, like the one imposed on Sinn Féin in 1988, merits consideration. That measure consigned the party to total obscurity. Who now remembers the names of Jimmy Adams or Martin O’Guinness? Without the ban, Sinn Féin could well have become a significant player in Northern Irish politics.
Michael Mullan
Bradford, West Yorkshire
• Thank you, Simon Jenkins, for a voice of reason (An echo chamber of mass hysteria only aids terrorists, 24 May).
Val Collier
Newent, Gloucestershire

On Friday, delegates from European football associations gathered in a London hotel for Uefa’s annual congress (Report, 24 May). They agreed new, strict guidelines to deal with racism, suggesting a commendable determination to combat discrimination in the sport.
We find it shocking that this same organisation shows total insensitivity to the blatant and entrenched discrimination inflicted on Palestinian sportsmen and women by Israel.
Despite direct appeals from representatives of the sport in Palestine and from anti-racist human rights campaigners across Europe, Uefa is rewarding Israel’s cruel and lawless behaviour by granting it the honour of hosting the European Under-21 finals next month.
Uefa should not allow Israel to use a prestigious football occasion to whitewash its racist denial of Palestinian rights and its illegal occupation of Palestinian land.
We urge Uefa to follow the brave example of world-renowned scientist Stephen Hawking who, on advice from Palestinian colleagues, declined to take part in an international conference in Israel. We call on Uefa, even at this late stage, to reverse the choice of Israel as a venue.
Archbishop Desmond Tutu, Frédéric Kanouté Footballer, John Austin MP, Rodney Bickerstaffe, Bob Crow, Victoria Brittain, Jeremy Corbyn MP, Caryl Churchill Playwright, Rev Garth Hewitt, Dr Ghada Karmi, Bruce Kent, Roger Lloyd Pack Actor, Ken Loach Film-maker, Michael Mansfield QC, Kika Markham Actor, Luisa Morgantini Former vice-president, European parliament, Prof Hilary Rose, Prof Steven Rose, Alexei Sayle Author and comedian, Jenny Tonge House of Lords, Dr Antoine Zahlan, Geoffrey Lee Red Card Israeli Racism, Tomas Perez Football Beyond Borders, John McHugo Liberal Democrat Friends of Palestine

In much the same way as Samuel Johnson stated that patriotism is the last refugee of the scoundrel, I think we can safely say fiduciary responsibility is the last refugee of a business leader on the ropes (Change the law and we’d pay more tax, says Google chief, 27 May). With 30 years of experience campaigning against many of the worst aspects of company behaviour, time and time again I have found this to be the last desperate response from those who have lost the argument in the court of public opinion.
I daresay abolitionist William Wilberforce was told by those who used slaves in their businesses that they had “a fiduciary responsibility to their shareholders” to make use of what was legally available to them and that they could not just “arbitrarily decide” to stop using slaves while their competitors still did.
Moral leadership is now called for. Surely there is one multinational company out there willing to break ranks and do the right thing on tax?
Paul Brannen
Newcastle upon Tyne
• It may be of interest to learn that Google, Starbucks, Amazon and Apple are not the only companies who find that Luxembourg has better fiscal weather than the UK. Here are some recent “country of origin” entries from my credit card statements:
First Great Western: Luxembourg
William Hill: Gibraltar
EasyJet: Ireland
The Trainline: Luxembourg
These are, of course, good old British companies. And in the case of First Great Western, and presumably all of the other train operating companies for whom the Trainline does most of the ticketing, they got a UK government grant in 2011-12 of 7.5p per passenger mile. No doubt the managements of these enterprises have perfectly good explanations.
Peter Thomas-Cruttwell
Symonds Yat, Herefordshire
• When employees change jobs they expect the Inland Revenue to charge them at a temporary emergency rate until the tax authorities are fully acquainted with their actual earnings.
I suggest this method be used for companies like Amazon, which have not provided a convincing account of their UK profits. Thus each £100 sale would have added £20 VAT and £21 corporation tax, simply collected as 41% VAT.
Normal companies are allowed running costs against their corporation tax, so I suggest that this allowance be irretrievably forfeited until they provide a convincing account of their UK profits. This forfeiture could help shorten the time needed by their accountants to help them start an honest relationship with the UK. For companies like Google, which are paid per click on an advertisement, the payment should be claimed from the client.
David Monkman
Huntingdon, Cambridgeshire
• Ed Miliband panders to the right in trying to shame Google (Miliband to tell Google: pay taxes or be cast like a rogue benefit claimant, 22 May). He could have scored a different political point by comparing them to other tax-dodgers such as people who bury their wealth in offshore accounts or MPs who fiddle expenses.
Anne Strachan
Manchester
• “I cannot see the point of tax havens. Or rather, I can see the point, but not why we tolerate them,” writes Simon Jenkins (22 May). “We” don’t tolerate them; “we” are powerless. Tax havens are more than just tolerated by “them”, the good folk who profit from their existence: the powerful, and the politicians who hope to attract party donations. I see the future for tax havens and their admirers as rosy.
Eddie Dougall
Bury St Edmunds, Suffolk
• As a first step towards more concrete action, the party leaders could demand that their MPs (and lords) resign directorships in companies which are either based in tax havens, or are part of groups that make use of tax havens.
Anthony Hayward
Dudley, West Midlands
• I avoid Starbucks – don’t like the coffee (It’s got my name on it – but that doesn’t mean they care, 27 May). But if I did, I would give a name so as to hear the barista holler “Taxman”.
John Launder
Winchester, Hampshire

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I spent two successive mornings shedding tears of despair over my morning cereals as I read your excellent, wide-ranging coverage of the appalling and tragic events in Woolwich.
Then I read the article by the humanist, A C Grayling, (letters, 25 May; Voices, 24 May) and felt a degree of hope at his logical and well-argued case for children to be taught to think for themselves, rather than to be indoctrinated into the dogma of religion from an early age.
But, for thousands of years, it has been in the very nature of the human race to invent a supreme being to explain the great questions of life.
Fair enough before science came along, but over time Man has used these “gods” to excuse all manner of extreme behaviour, thus saving us from the inconvenience of being responsible for our own actions.
I’m afraid it will take more than reasoned arguments from sensible people like Grayling and Dawkins to overcome this inbuilt characteristic. Back to despair …
Louise Thomas, Abingdon, Oxfordshire
 
As Salman Rushdie once observed, most religious people aren’t particularly theological. At the deepest level, their ties to religion are those of family and community.
But the same cannot be said of converts, who are over-represented in Islamist attacks in the UK. Professor Grayling’s proposal to stop the religious indoctrination of children is of no relevance to the Woolwich suspects, who chose rather than “inherited” someone else’s “picture of the world”.
Peter McKenna, Liverpool
 
A C Grayling says that most of the world’s ills are caused by dogma. He then proceeds to give us two-thirds of a page of his own dogma.
John Williams, Chichester, West Sussex
 
I admire the letters from the British Muslims (24 May) who are deeply upset by the Woolwich incident. But we need to seek a deeper reason for this outrageous act.
The core problem is the intolerance of all the world’s major religions. Judaism, Christianity and Islam all assert that they, and they alone, are the purveyors of the truth about God. So conflict is inbuilt. Christian and Muslims at loggerheads in Nigeria; Hindus and Muslims in India; and Buddhists and Muslims in Burma.
Religious belief grew because human beings were puzzled about what their purpose was in the universe and how they got there. The world’s religions came into being long before the modern scientific age demonstrated the hopeless inadequacy of their origin and tenets.
The Astronomer Royal, Sir Martin Rees, is a strong believer in the multiverse theory. That is to say, there are countless universes out there of which we have no  knowledge. If true, humans  are unlikely to be God’s unique creatures, made in his own image. We may, in fact, be  in a situation of virtual reality. Yes, there may be a creator  (or creators) out there somewhere.
Our existing religions are emotional crutches which we could do without. Then we would stand a much better chance of us all living together in harmony with one another.
David Ashton, Shipbourne, Kent
 
Gay marriage no threat to justice
Jane Hayter-Hames (letters, 24 May) complains that gay civil partners receive fiscal benefits not available to single people. Civil partnership is about far more than fiscal benefits. It shows social acceptance of relationships akin to marriage formerly considered as unworthy and even evil.
There may be a case for allowing some of these fiscal benefits in the other circumstances she mentions but that is a completely different issue from that of conferring a status equivalent to marriage.
The differences between civil partnerships and marriage are legally minimal, but many perceive them as a signal that such relationships are inferior to equivalent heterosexual relationships. Strong feelings of injustice should be redressed unless doing so risks harming others. It is hard to find evidence of such risks in gay marriage.
John Eekelaar, Oxford
 
According to Ms Hayter-Hames, it is “infuriating and deeply unjust” that gay couples are accorded the same rights as those of heterosexual married ones. In fact, what is infuriating and unjust is that she still sees homosexual relationships as nothing more than sexual (quote, “Anyone can have sex; you don’t have to be given tax breaks to get that together”).
People who like to reduce their arguments against gay marriage to a sexualised issue should open their minds to the idea that any committed relationship is a tiny bit more sophisticated than to revolve around what goes on in the bedroom.
Alex Guthrie, Newcastle upon Tyne
 
What is the difference between register office weddings and civil partnerships (letters, 23 May)? In the register office, one recites an order of words imposed on one by the establishment, so that every marriage is exactly the same.
Civil partnership can be in any form one chooses, with any mode of ceremony or none. My partner and I simply signed on the dotted line and concluded the business.
Peter Forster, London N4
 
Act of equality
You repeat the word “actresses” in your article “Women in movies” (Arts & Culture, 17 May). We have no difficulty in talking of female singers; imagine the alternative of singesses. I think we have forgotten “usherettes” and “stewardesses”. Let us delete “actresses” too, the word, not the people.
Celia Jordan, Warrington, Cheshire
 
The hypocrisy that surrounds company tax
Margaret Hodge is surely right that tax raises a moral concern (“Companies have to pay their share”, 27 May). One moral concern unmentioned is the way in which company directors and government are typically disingenuous in their arguments.
First, directors often proclaim a legal duty to maximise profits for shareholders and hence to minimise tax. No such duty exists. The Companies Act 2006 makes it clear that directors must seek to promote the company’s success, explicitly noting, for example, that regard should be had for company reputation, employees’ interests and the community.
That is clearly a far cry from the “maximise profits” mantra. It is clearly a near-cry to “stop wriggling through loopholes to avoid tax”.
Second, parliament simply legislates that, unless explicitly permitted in the legislation (perhaps for ISAs, for example), operations which it is reasonable to believe as primarily for tax avoidance are deemed undone.
HMRC already has powers to treat certain artificial tax-avoiding operations as undone and, further, a whole range of legislation and legal judgements rest on what it is reasonable to believe about individuals’ intentions, motivations and knowledge.
Peter Cave, London W1
 
We applaud Margaret Hodge’s campaign to force companies to declare their tax avoidance  strategies. In the interest of  balance, and to avoid the possibility of charges of hypocrisy, should MPs make a similar declaration or declare that they are not using any strategies to avoid or mitigate their tax liabilities?
Clive Georgeson, Dronfield, Derbyshire
 
The problem of tax avoidance, we are often told, can be solved only by international co-operation on this issue, which Peter Popham hopes the EU, after many years of failure, will soon achieve, (Voices, 23 May).
While we all hold our breath and wait for such a miracle, I propose another idea. First, let’s declare that any income, to any party in the UK or elsewhere, derived from transactions which pass through or involve parties within the UK economic sphere, is fully subject to UK taxation.
Second, allow that any taxpayers who can prove that they have paid, or are required to pay, a specific amount of tax elsewhere on all or part of this UK-derived income can deduct this (typically small) amount from their UK tax bill.
Surely such a system would render most forms of offshore tax-dodging futile?
Andrew Clifton, Bradford on Avon, Wiltshire
 
Divorce not part of housing crisis
Penelope Keith’s comments on women divorcing in later life (“Crisis in housing stock? Must be women divorcing for the fun of it”, Voices, 23 May) appears to underestimate the issues and concerns that many women face when their marriage breaks down.
Ms Keith claims that divorcées in their fifties and beyond are causing house prices to rise, as separated individuals seek to purchase smaller properties or flats to pursue their new-found single lives.
Whether or not this contributes to the growing housing problem this country faces is debatable. But in my experience as a family law solicitor, couples who decide to separate in later life often find their split to be far more amicable and less troublesome than those who do so early on. By removing the prospect of disrupting a young family, disputes and disagreements in “silver splits” can be kept to a minimum.
And, by deciding to end a marriage after 20 or 30 years, the couple have demonstrated a commendable effort to making the marriage work.
Sarah Thompson, Manchester
 
A tiptoe through the tulips with Lee
Geoffrey Macnab’s review of the film Liberace (22 May) reminded me of a totally outrageous meeting I arranged between Lee (Liberace) and the late, great Kenny Everett.
I was head of promotion for Warner Bros Records in the early 1970s. Lee was doing a TV special for ATV at Elstree Studios. I got a call from Kenny who said: “I’d love to meet him”, so I drove him to the studios where I was a spectator at a bizarre conversation.
Kenny’s conversation was full of double entendres and Lee was playing it totally straight so, although in English of course, it was not a common language.
After half an hour I drove Kenny back. “Don’t expect me to play a track from his [Lee’s] album on Radio 1 tomorrow morning, just because I’ve met him,” he said. As we drove on Kenny spotted a magnificent magnolia tree, “I’ve always wanted a tulip tree like that” he said”.
The next morning, a Saturday, on air Kenny played a short track from Lee’s album with the back announcement, “I just love the tulip tree”. Not payola so much as plantola.
Brian (Hutch) Hutchinson, London SW4

Times:

To bring Muslims fully into “the mainstream” an honest debate is necessary but it cannot be a simplistic one
Sir, Dr Hargey’s letter (May 25) is well meant and well taken. However, even if one concedes a relationship between the invasion of Iraq and the emergence of Muslim terrorism in the UK, his plea for the UK “to honestly address the roots of Islamic terrorism” raises complex questions.
Can we simply blame it on the invasions of Iraq and Afghanistan without examining the records of Saddam Hussein and Mullah Omar? Should we discount the export of Wahhabism from Saudi Arabia? Should the failure of Third World states like Pakistan to control domestic terrorism be ignored? What of Iran’s state terrorism and its export to Iraq, Lebanon and Syria? What of the failure of Muslims to recognise a Jewish state in Israel? What of the rather mixed results for democracy of the Arab Spring? Then there is the fundamental question of whether Islam is truly compatible with democracy rather than some kind of theocracy.
To bring Muslims fully into “the mainstream” an honest debate is necessary but it cannot be a simplistic one. The greatest responsibility will rest on the shoulders of those like Imam Hargey who must teach the proper meaning of Islam to British Muslims. Despite these reservations, we must offer them every support.
Alan Sked
Professor of International History, LSE
Sir, Dr T. Hargey, Imam of the Oxford Muslim Congregation, says that the murder of a soldier has to be condemned without reservation immediately followed by a “however” suggesting that, in some way, the country brings these acts of terrorism upon itself. As long as this frame of mind exists and the roots of Islamic terrorism are found in the preaching of many imams in the Arab world, the UK and other European countries, terrorist atrocities will continue to occur.
Alan Miller
Edgware, Greater London
Sir, Muslims have as much stake in British society as Jews, Sikhs and other faiths, the difference being that other faiths recognise that Britain allows them to worship unheeded and without restrictions, while too often Muslim communities demand special treatment. I do not see how our intervention in Iraq has promoted barbarism by some Muslims on our streets, and to suggest British society needs to address the roots of Islamic terrorism is a denial of what some imams are preaching in their mosques. Terrorism as in Woolwich is anathema to all civilised society.
Brian Lux
Llandudno, Conwy
Sir, Real peace cannot prevail until people of every religion realise that violence has no place in our society. To seek to justify it is to promote it.
Dr Hargey does not condone, but he is mistaken in suggesting that the UK should address “the roots of Islamic terrorism”. If there are such weeds it is he that should be digging them out and, alongside leaders of every faith, should be teaching the peaceful opportunities to make our world a better place.
Jack Lynes
Pinner, Middx
Sir, I am troubled by the implication in Dr Hargey’s letter that the solution to Islamic extremism is to tailor our foreign policy to suit the wishes of those who otherwise risk becoming violent. This is tantamount to saying that a violent minority should be allowed to shape our foreign policy.
Hugh Rawson
London, SW17

relocation package falls short of guaranteeing protection and safety for many brave individuals
Sir, We welcome the decision to grant some Afghan interpreters the right to resettle in the UK. The principle was established in Iraq, and there is no reason to treat our brave Afghan interpreters differently.
However, the proposed relocation package falls short of guaranteeing protection and safety for many brave individuals. Specifically, the asylum offer may only apply to those working on or after January 1, 2013; excluding hundreds who risked their lives alongside UK troops in this decade-long war.
Death threats forced many interpreters to stop working for the British before 2013, and many are still in hiding. Under such a deal, Abdul — who courageously raised the alarm about the hundreds of men at risk and whom 82,000 people have backed — may not be offered sanctuary in the UK as he stopped working with the British Army in June last year.
It would be an affront to the proud tradition of this country as signatory to the UN Convention on Refugees to refuse protection and safety to those who put their lives on the line to serve with our forces. We urge the Government to extend the protection measures and offer a safe haven to all of our translators in Afghanistan, and not abandon the hundreds who, stranded by this deal, will be left to live in fear of execution by the Taleban.
David Davis, MP
Stephen McPartland, MP

A new report by Save the Children leaves little doubt of the link between poor nutrition and literacy – children need to develop properly
Sir, The appalling impact of poverty on health and life expectancy in the developing world is well known. As children’s authors we are particularly saddened to learn of the long-term impact of poor nutrition on children’s brain development and cognition. The physical impact of malnutrition means that even when children have access to education they often achieve less than their full potential, and many miss out on one of life’s greatest joys — reading.
A new report by Save the Children leaves little doubt of the link between poor nutrition and literacy. In a study of 7,300 children in four countries, those who were chronically malnourished were on average nearly 20 per cent less likely to read than those children who were not malnourished, allowing for socio-economic variables.
There are many reasons why children have trouble reading, including lack of support at home and poor education. Such problems are deep-rooted and difficult to solve. Nutrition interventions, by contrast, are relatively simple, and have a huge impact. It is a tragedy that at present they represent just 0.3 per cent of global development spending.
Ensuring that children have the nutrients to develop properly should be seen as a basic obligation. At the nutrition summit hosted by the UK before this year’s G8, world leaders must make a priority of tackling the hidden crisis of malnutrition for good. The futures of a generation in the poorest countries are at stake.
Axel Scheffler (illustrator of The Gruffalo); Ally Kennan (Beast); Brian Selznick (The Invention of Hugo Cabret); Cath Cassidy (The Chocolate Box Girls); Celia Rees (Witch Child); Cressida Cowell (How to Train Your Dragon); Charlie Higson (Young Bond); David Walliams (Mr Stink); Eoin Colfer (Artemis Fowl); Elen Caldecott (the great ice cream heist); Emily Gravett (Wolves); Elizabeth Laird (The Witching Hour); Francesca Simon (Horrid Henry); Georgia Byng (Molly Moon); John Boyne (Boy in the Striped Pyjamas); Julia Donaldson (The Gruffalo); Lydia Monks (The Singing Mermaid); Michael Morpurgo (War Horse); Michael Bond (Paddington Bear); Nicholas Lake (Hostage Three); Oliver Jeffers (Lost and Found); Peter Dickinson (The Flight of Dragons); Philip Pullman (His Dark Materials); Rebecca Cobb (illustrator of The Paper Dolls); Rod Campbell (Dear Zoo); Sheena Wilkinson (Taking Flight); Tony Ross (illustrator of Horrid Henry)

013

Despite regular articles on the Cities Fit for Cycling campaign, only 63,798 people have signed the e-petition on the Government’s website
Sir, As a cyclist, and as a mother and grandmother of keen cyclists, I am concerned that despite your regular articles on your Cities Fit for Cycling campaign, only 63,798 people have signed the e-petition on the Government’s website (thetim.es/ cyclesafepetition) calling on David Cameron to implement a blueprint for increased cycle use; 100,000 signatures are required for the e-petition to be considered for debate in Parliament.
Surely your readers can do more to boost this excellent campaign, if not for themselves, then for their families and future generations. Some people may think that by signing up to your Cities Fit for Cycling campaign they have also signed the e-petition to the Government. They have not: they are separate items.
Rosalind Brierley
Peterborough

Reports of the lost first web page, which contained “text and a few links”, pose the question of what the page could have linked to
Sir, I was intrigued by the hunt for the first web page (report May 27), and even more so that it contained “nothing more than text and a few links”. As it was the first ever web page, were these links to the chicken or the egg?
George Medd
Twyford, Hants

Telegraph:

SIR – On Thursday, you published a picture of Gwyneth Paltrow and Kate Hudson at a party “to start the summer season”.
The Season always used to begin with Private View Day at the Royal Academy, held on the Friday before the first Monday in May – this year, May 3.
That would be followed up by Queen Charlotte’s Ball, around May 17.
Anyone interested in how the Season once worked should read Angela Lambert’s delightful and well-written book 1939: The Last Season of Peace. Of course, things would never be the same.
Richard Foster
Angmering, West Sussex

SIR – Recently working in the Prison Service, I found it overwhelmingly politically correct in its obsession with gender, race and sexual orientation.
Governors appeared frightened of Muslims and the potential for allegation of racism from them. Officers were fearful lest they appear “anti” something. This undermined cohesiveness and pride in the job. In prisons, the Government’s “Prevent” initiative (which seeks to divert Muslims from terrorism) was hopeless.
This toxic ethos – which the Coalition is too ideologically compromised to address – has connived against the constructive, reformative discipline that prisoners need.
There is a disgraceful unofficial policy of opposing ex-Forces personnel helping in prisons, on the grounds that they are “harsh”, whereas they are precisely the people required.
Fr Marcus Stewart
Broadstairs, Kent
Related Articles
The vanished Season, when debs delighted
27 May 2013
SIR – The Olympic Games provided the opportunity once more to see members of our Armed Forces in uniform. One of the many sad consequences of the murder in Woolwich may be a reversion to keeping our Forces hidden away. That would be an understandable, but in my view, regrettable reaction.
We should do what we can to encourage them to live their lives among us, not barricaded away to be seen only in emergencies. The quid pro quo, of course, is to ensure that they can defend themselves and are properly protected.
Edward Vale
London SW19
SIR – The most fitting memorial to Drummer Lee Rigby would be for the Government to rescind its proposal to disband his battalion, the 2nd Fusiliers, one of the most operationally experienced and well-recruited units of the British Army.
Brigadier Roy Wilde (retd)
Colonel, The Fusiliers 2001-2007
Bury, Lancashire
SIR – Following the grotesque murder at Woolwich, the Home Secretary is turning her attention to another “snoopers’ charter”. Such a communications Bill would reduce and threaten the freedom of every British citizen, when it would appear the Woolwich suspects were already in full view of the security services.
The Home Secretary’s priority should be to maximise the effectiveness of the state’s resources in managing the obvious and manifest threat posed by a few thousand or so people, rather than poking about the business of 58 million.
Derek Poots
Horsham, West Sussex
SIR – Why is the BBC building up the importance of the opinions of those who seek to promote terror?
Terrorism is about spreading fear, and I do not expect the BBC to allow itself to be used for that purpose.
Tom Green
Wigan, Lancashire
Too many laws
SIR – I commend Sue Cameron’s article (“The laws of the land aren’t fit for purpose”, Comment, May 23). The report to which it referred, When Laws Become Too Complex, by the Office of the Parliamentary Counsel, is exceptional. Over-legislation and its attendant complexity are bedevilling our whole culture.
On top of the 2,247 pages of primary legislation in 2009, there were around 14,000 additional pages of secondary legislation. This is no less the law of the land, though it receives utterly ineffectual scrutiny by Parliament, because statutory instruments, as they are called, cannot be amended!
Another indication of the self-defeating maze we have fashioned for ourselves is that last year the mere index (the Consolidated Tables) for Halsbury’s Laws of England ran to 3,554 pages.
Other democracies legislate far less. The Coalition, via its Red Tape Challenge, has indicated that it is not mindless of all this, but Parliament has fallen into self-harming ways, which are monumentally difficult to escape.
These include the mandate theory of government, which “entitles” or “requires” the government of the day to pass into law its overflowing basket of election promises. Then the whipping system produces a legislative production-line (only six defeats in more than 3,000 votes between 2001 and 2012). There is also the guillotining of debates, which leaves major parts of most Bills unscrutinised by the Commons.
This is at the root of a dangerous and growing disaffection with democracy. If ever a Royal Commission was essential, one is needed to grapple with these problems.
Lord Phillips of Sudbury
London SW1
Switch marked ‘parents’
SIR – There is a control against children viewing pornography (Letters, May 25). It is commonly known as parents.
Instead of looking elsewhere for controls we should maybe look to ourselves.
Douglas Robertson
Newcastle upon Tyne
Shale cannot fail
SIR – The Institute of Directors (report, May 22) rightly set out the potential benefits of commercial shale gas development in the United Kingdom.
We agree. We have lifted the moratorium and announced tax incentives to encourage exploration. There are more than 150 onshore oil and gas licences already in place.
We have a robust regulatory system that requires approval from environmental and health and safety agencies before any drilling is allowed.
We will also be proposing a programme of community benefits by the summer.
Michael Fallon MP (Con)
Minister for Energy
London SW1
Scent flying
SIR – For many years I have braved the perfume barrier of the department store (Letters, May 25), but over the past five years I have had to run the same gauntlet at airports. It is impossible to board an aircraft at a British airport without passing through a duty-free perfume sales outlet.
I have resorted to taking a deep breath and holding my nose as I transit the chemical warfare zone on my way to the departure gate. I have complained to airport operating companies but my words fall on deaf ears, or closed sinuses.
Roy Hedges
Cheadle, Staffordshire
Going into the red
SIR – The Coalition Government created the Major Projects Authority to oversee the robustness of various government undertakings. In its first report, the MPA has identified a number of risks in some of these projects (report, May 25) and has assessed them as being “red” or “red/amber”.
The immediate response of the Coalition is to say that the MPA is using out-of-date information, and that improvements have been made. This raises the obvious question of why such a quango was created.
It also makes me ask that if some of the at-risk projects have improved, how many of the projects assessed as “green” have now moved into being “at risk”?
Neil Raw
York
Ringing up charges
SIR – I have just received a letter from BT informing me that from July, customers will have to pay to receive a bill in the post.
This scheme will unfortunately hit pensioners and others who do not have computers. Why should these people, who have no choice, be forced into subsidising BT’s postal costs by having to pay for their bills?
S E Woodward
Burray, Orkney
What Kent did for us
SIR – Thank you for the reminder (Sacred Mysteries, May 25) that today is St Augustine’s feast day, and that he was welcomed by Ethelbert, King of Kent, a pagan who was converted to Christianity and converted the Cantware, the people of Kent.
He gave the land upon which Canterbury Cathedral was built in 597 and Rochester Cathedral in 604. Ethelbert also gave Kent the first code of English laws in about 604.
Sir Robert Worcester
University of Kent
Canterbury
Home and away
SIR – The German supporters attending Saturday’s Champions League final at Wembly provided, I thought, an object lesson to some of our hate-fuelled, home-grown football fans. They reminded me, dare I say it, of a rugby crowd.
Peter Wyton
Gloucester
Behind the secret German wartime radio station
SIR – I was fascinated, reading the Britain at War feature on the Court & Social page (May 24), to discover your correspondent at the time quoting the “secret German radio station Gustav Siegfried Eins”, among other sources for the report on the Italian situation in May 1943.
Even today, few people are aware of the secret British propaganda organisation, the Political Warfare Executive, though some of its activities – such as the aerial distribution by the RAF of millions of leaflets over the Continent, and the direction of the BBC’s foreign broadcasts to occupied Europe – are better known. I learnt more about it when researching my book British Propaganda to France, 1940-1944 (2007).
The Political Warfare Executive also operated a number of radio stations, all of which purported to be something they were not, to spread their propaganda message more effectively.
One was Gustav Siegfried Eins, the brainchild of the journalist Sefton Delmer. Intended to appear, as your correspondent says, “anti-Nazi but pro-Junkers”, its purpose was to sow seeds of doubt and distrust in ordinary Germans.
Its content was reinforced by the character of its main speaker, “Der Chef”, as a patriotic German who had served with distinction in the Great War, but who had come to despise the Nazi system and its excesses.
Mixing truth with credible fiction – such as the report of Italian overtures for peace – allowed Der Chef to provoke his listeners into questioning what else the Nazi-controlled news system was not telling them.
Whether it worked or not we shall never know, but that Gustav Siegfried Eins was seen as sufficiently reliable to be reported in The Daily Telegraph is evidence to suggest it would certainly have been believable to the Germans it was intended for.
Dr Tim Brooks
London E11

Irish Times:

Sir, – Eoin O’Malley (“Abolition of Seanad makes Dáil reform a vital priority”) writes that committee chairs and the Ceann Comhairle should be elected by secret ballot. Anyone who is a follower of Irish politics would see this as a naive proposal. Political party members would still vote along party lines and in fact such an initiative, if adopted, would ensure full government control over parliamentary and committee chairmanship across the board. There would have to be some other degree of qualification added, such as a d’Hondt system of allocation for a “rotating” Ceann Comhairle position, whereby two or more fill the role over a given Dáil term. – Yours, etc,
JOHN KENNEDY,
Knocknashee,
Goatstown,
Dublin 14.
A chara, – Geraldine Kennedy (Opinion, May 25th) commented that the hearings at the Oireachtas Committee on Health on abortion make the case for the retention of a reformed Seanad. I fail to see the connection. Surely they make a much stronger case instead for strengthening the committee system as an avenue for drawing experts into the democratic process when relevant, as was done in this instance, rather than giving them a permanent place in a second house in the legislature. – Is mise,
WILLIAM QUILL,
Westfield Park,
Bray, Co Wicklow
Sir, – Your Editorial (May 16th) stated that “12 detailed reports on necessary reforms were allowed to gather dust”. Subsequently, Joe Stynes (May 18th) clarified that the only report which is both specific to the Seanad and unimplemented is the 2004 report of the Seanad Committee on Procedures and Privileges.
How then can Deputy Paschal Donohoe (Opinion, May 23rd) re-iterate that, after “10 reports”, “not a single reform has happened”? What ever happened to “facts are sacred”?
Which branch of the Oireachtas was responsible for implementing those reports anyway? – Yours, etc,
SEÁN Ó SIOCHRÚ,
Dalcassian Downs,
Glasnevin, Dublin 11.
Sir, – Paschal Donohoe asks why the Scandinavian countries, which he says are “the most accountable and effective political systems in the world”, have similar populations to Ireland but have an average of 60 fewer national politicians than we do (Opinion, May 23rd). He concludes that it is because they do not have a second chamber of parliament, like our Seanad. This is an extremely rash conclusion which was clearly reached without any examination of the political systems of those countries.
The simple reason for this is that the constitutional structures of the Nordic countries have devolved far more political responsibility to local level, removing the need for a larger national legislature. They each have huge and vastly more powerful systems of local government than we have in Ireland. Denmark has 98 local authorities and 2,500 local councillors. Finland has 304 local authorities and just under 10,000 local councillors. And Norway has 423 local authorities and 12,000 local councillors.
Ireland, in contrast, has 115 local councils and 1,600 councillors. Under proposals put forward by the Government, which Mr Donohoe lauds in his column, this will be reduced to 32 local councils and 950 councillors.

Sir, – I have a problem with Brian Whiteside’s reported statement (Joe Humphrey, Home News, May 27th) that “Our cause is simply the promotion of humanism.” I don’t like the word “cause” and I don’t like the word “promotion”; both smack strongly of Richard Dawkins’s campaign to make atheists of us all. I’m an agnostic and so, I suppose, veer towards humanism and atheism, but I wouldn’t dream of trying to convert anyone else to my way of thinking. In fact, I’m envious of people who have a faith and of the security and comfort it brings them. – Yours, etc,
JANE MEREDITH,
Glen Lawn Drive,

Sir, – The Financial Emergency Measures in the Public Interest Bill gives Government power to unilaterally cut pay and pensions, to change allowances, to freeze increments and to change conditions of service including working hours in the public service (Home News, May 24th). It enshrines in law a more penal version of the original Government demands made to unions in the recent Croke Park II process.
It has a key coercive clause. It contains a provision “for a suspension of incremental progression for three years for all public servants unless they are covered by a collective agreement that modifies the terms of the incremental suspension and which has been registered with the Labour Relations Commission”. This means that unless a trade union signs up to the agreement, even if the pay of members is under €65,000, its members’ increments will be frozen for three years. This is a draconian measure far beyond anything contained in the original Croke Park II proposals.
Union members or executives may vote for or against Croke Park II as revised. That is their privilege and their right. But what are the consequences if trade unions do not immediately reject this Bill by declaring that they will not register an agreement with a public service employer under its provisions? They would be forcing their members to vote on current proposals with the only choice being “Haddington Road” or worse. They would be enabling the Government to impose the legislation on all other unions and public service workers. They would be sanctioning pension cuts on members who have no vote on any proposals.
By doing this they would be becoming quasi-arms of government. They would be assenting to a version of corporatism which would undermine the right to free trade unions and to free trade union activity by individuals in the public service. They would be assenting to an unprecedented erosion of trade union rights in Ireland into the indefinite future. Unions can make this legislation unworkable if they refuse to register their agreement with the LRC even if they agree to “Haddington Road”.
As a former president of the TUI and a former member of the executive of Dublin Council of Trade Unions, I appeal to all unions to reject this Bill by making it clear immediately, that irrespective of their decision on Haddington Road, they will not register such an agreement under the provisions of this anti-worker, anti-trade union Bill. – Yours, etc,
PADDY HEALY,

Sir, – I wonder if Lord Haddington, a 19th-century viceroy, ever thought that a road on the southside of Dublin city would be called after him, let alone that an Irish government agreement with the trade unions would bear his title.
It is said that Lord Haddington was a man who said nothing, did nothing and was nothing. Perhaps.
Let us hope that the Haddington Road Agreement will go further than that and be successful. JFKs words, “Ask not what your country can do for you, but what you can do for your country”, might be an appropriate maxim to be applied to the agreement. – Yours, etc,  
JOE MURRAY,
Beggars Bush Court,
Ballsbridge, Dublin 4.
Sir, – Rodney Devitt (Letters, May 25th) welcomes the revised Croke Park Agreement having a Dublin 4 title. It may imply class but will those with class, ie the teachers, accept it? – Yours, etc,
JACK MORRISSEY,
Acorn Road,

Sir, – Everyone in west Clare is celebrating the recognition of the Loop Head Peninsula as the overall winner in The Irish Times Best Place to Holiday in Ireland competition.
But the imminent arrival of fracking to the area threatens the rugged natural beauty of the whole region. The current Government – led by Ministers Rabbitte and O’Dowd – is intent on licensing Enegi Oil plc to explore and then drill for gas using fracking (or unconventional gas extraction).
Local tourism businesses and local residents face the transformation of the area into an industrial wasteland of toxic stillponds. Local farmers face ruined ground water and aquifers from a myriad of wells leaking toxic chemicals.
Indeed, it is an inconvenient industry fact that oil and gas wells will leak over time.
Moreover, the west Clare area is geologically unsuitable for this type of process and the whole Shannon estuary is threatened by this ruinous technology.
There is a growing realisation of the economic futility of the fracking project and of the horrific price in environmental disaster that will be paid by future generations of people in west Clare and across Ireland for this fiasco.
Let’s all keep Ireland fracking free. – Yours, etc,
MARK WILSON-PIERCE,

Irish Independent:

* Recently, Pope Francis said: “The Lord redeemed all of us, all of us, with the blood of Christ, not just Catholics. Everyone.”
Also in this section
Strong objection to Crown piece
Reject the dirty shirt
We need public transport
Before popes were around, another emperor, atheist, statesman and philosopher said much the same thing: “Live a good life. If there are gods and they are just, then they will not care how devout you have been, but will welcome you based on the virtues you have lived by.
“If there are gods, but unjust, then you should not want to worship them. If there are no gods, then you will be gone, but will have lived a noble life that will live on in the memories of your loved ones.” Marcus Aurelius AD 121-180.
The essence of what a good person is can also be marked by a man called Don Giuseppe Puglisi. He was a priest who was murdered outside his church in 1993 by the mafia in Sicily for speaking out against them. His catchphrase was a question to encourage others to stand up, too, ” . . . and what if somebody did something?”
It is that question that comes just before courage that defines for a person and a people what it means to be good, and gives hope for us all.
Barry Clifford
Oughterard, Co Galway
IN THE GLASS HOUSE
* People in glass houses shouldn’t throw stones, as they may Shatter.
Marie O’Reilly
Ballysimon Road, Limerick
SHATTER OWN GOALS
* How can Alan Shatter score so many own goals with his foot in his mouth?
N Cunningham
Address with editor
ABORTION CONCERNS
* There is grave concern among doctors across the specialties about the proposed legislation for termination of pregnancy in the case of threatened suicide on the part of the mother.
Many of us have practised, or are now practising, in jurisdictions where such legislation was the first step towards what has become abortion on demand. Attempts to revisit legislation and reduce the number of abortions by restricting the grounds on which termination of pregnancy may be performed, such as gestational age, have been fraught and largely fruitless. Those who think there will be a second chance, whether by a so-called sunset clause or otherwise, are naive.
We would like to make a clear statement to the members of the Oireachtas that there is no evidence that termination is the treatment for threatened suicide in pregnancy and that if they vote for the proposed legislation, they will be voting for the legalisation of abortion in this country.
Those members of the Oireachtas who believe that they are only doing what the Constitution permits since the X Case judgment should seek to examine the psychiatric evidence heard by the Supreme Court in 1992. They will find none.
They might alternatively examine the statements of the psychiatrists called before the Oireachtas Health Committee hearings in 2012, to see what evidence there is that might support the Supreme Court decision. They will find none.
We would also remind them that the World Health Organisation consistently places Ireland in the top five countries for women’s safety in pregnancy.
We would urge members of the Oireachtas respectfully, but robustly, to vote against the proposed legislation.
Dr Ann Barry, GP, Dublin
Dr Anne Kennedy, GP, Co Mayo
Dr Anne Ryan, GP, Co Kildare
Dr Anne-Marie Leech, GP, Co Wexford
Dr Bridget O’Brien, GP, Co Kerry
Dr Cliodhna Donnelly Palliative Care, Galway
Dr Cristina Bordinc, GP, Wexford
Dr Daniel Purcell, GP, Co Kildare
Prof David Ryan
Maxillo-Facial Surgeon, Dublin
Dr Deirdre Gleeson
Occupational Health Physician/GP, Co Kildare
Prof Eamonn O’Dwyer
Obstetrician Gynaecologist, Co Galway
Dr Eileen Reilly
Obstetrician Gynaecologist, Galway
Dr Eoghan De Faoite, NCHD, Dublin
Dr Felim T Donnelly, GP, Galway
Dr George Fuller, GP, Cork
Dr Helen T O’Brien, GP, Dublin
Mr James Sheehan
Orthopaedic Surgeon, Galway
Dr Janina Lyons, GP, Dublin
Dr John C Kehoe, GP, Co Kildare
Dr John Kehoe SNR, GP, Co Kildare
Dr John Monaghan
Obstetrician Gynaecologist, Co Galway
Dr Jonathan Jacob, GP, Co Carlow
Dr Jude McSharry, GP, Co Sligo
Dr Maire Mirium Duggan
Obstetrician Gynaecologist, Dublin
Dr Maire Nic Ghearailt, GP, Co Wicklow
Dr Mairead MacConnaill, GP, Cork
Dr Marie Therese McKenna, GP, Donegal
Dr Marie Twomey, Palliative Care, Dublin
Dr Mary P Carroll, Radiologist, Donegal
Dr Maureen Brennan, GP, Dublin
Dr Maurice Fahy, GP, Co Kerry
Dr Michael Salter, GP, Co Wicklow
Dr Mirium Hogan, GP, Co Kilkenny
Dr Murrogh Birmingham, GP, Co Donegal
Dr Myles Monaghan
Anaesthetics Trainee, Dublin
Dr Olive Pierse, GP, Co Kerry
Dr Orla Halpenny, GP, Dublin
Dr Paschal O’Dea, GP, Co Carlow
Dr Patricia O’Toole, GP, Carlow
Dr Patrick Kelly, GP trainee, Co Waterford
Dr Patrick McSharry, GP, Co Sligo
Dr Pauline Burke, Public Health, Co Limerick
Dr Pauline Kane, GP, Dublin
Dr Peter Quinn, GP, Cork
Dr Phil Boyle, Fertility Specialist, Galway
Dr Phillip Aherne, GP, Co Kildare
Dr Ravi Kumar, GP, Wexford
Dr Rita O’Connor, General Medicine, Clare
Dr Seamus Kennedy, GP, Co Mayo
Dr Sean O Domhnaill, Psychiatrist, Kildare
Dr Sinead Kelly, Palliative Care, Dublin
Dr Trevor Hayes
Obstetrician Gynaecologist, Co Kilkenny
Dr Ursula Nusgen, Microbiologist, Dublin
Dr William P Fox, GP, Co Westmeath
Dr William Purcell, GP, Co Kildare
THE BLAME GAME
* There is still some talk that the Government will try to bring in a banking inquiry to look at the events surrounding September 2008.
Why should we, as a State, waste so much of taxpayers’ hard-earned money when the dogs in the street know who is responsible for the sorry state our country is in. The answer – no one!
Paul Doran
Clondalkin, Dublin 22
SHAMEFUL HISTORY
* Two harrowing letters appeared in your paper in the last week or so with regard to the terror of corporal punishment in Irish schools during the 1950s and 1960s.
One, entitled ‘School of Terror’, from Paddy O’Brien, of Balbriggan, Co Dublin, says in those days school masters/mistresses/priests/brothers assaulted children who weren’t able to keep up with their lessons by slapping them on the hands with a cane supplied by the State.
The other, entitled ‘School Misery’, name and address with editor, says sadistic punishments were administered on a daily basis in a small sleepy village during the 1950s and 1960s.
This of course was physical abuse, and the one thing to remember is that any kind of childhood abuse, be it sexual or otherwise, remains with the child for the rest of their lives and makes it much more difficult to survive in life afterwards.
I went to a private school in Dublin in the 1960s. Physical and mental abuse was rampant. Fear was the chief motivator from dawn to dusk, and permeated the walls, the classrooms and study hall. One priest at the time was a tyrant who ruled with fear and a leather strap. We got a reasonable education but at a very high price. Afterwards it was extremely difficult to survive outside the walls. God forgive us all in this country for accepting any kind of abuse in any of our schools.
Just like the industrial schools and Magdalene Laundries, this is also part of our shameful history we should never forget.
Name and address with editor
Irish Independent


Back to normality

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Normal 28th May 2013

I trot round the park today and listen to the Navy lark. I Oh dear, oh dear
Its families day on Troutbridge and all the relatives come to visit bringing sticky buns and Pertwee raffles the ships anchor. Wren Chastens plays female sister versions of all the crew. Priceless.
A quiet day off out to the bank and shopping very tired under the weather
We watch The Chiltren hundreds a wonderful old film as just as true today
I win at Scrabble today, just and gets just under 400, Mary might get her revenge tomorrow, I hope.

Obituary:

Murrey Marder
Murrey Marder, who has died aged 93, played a crucial if unsung role in the downfall of Senator Joe McCarthy and coined the term “credibility gap” to describe the growing public cynicism regarding President Lyndon B Johnson’s upbeat pronouncements about the war in Vietnam.

Murrey Marder 
7:01PM BST 28 May 2013
According to legend, it was Ed Murrow who “brought down” Joseph McCarthy, the Red-baiting demagogue, in an April 1954 episode of the CBS documentary See It Now, in which the senator from Wisconsin was exposed as a bully and a liar. In fact, CBS’s decision to broadcast the show came well after newspaper journalists had smelled a rat.
Prominent among these was Marder, a Washington Post correspondent who had long been suspicious of McCarthy’s headline-grabbing claims about communist infiltration. In autumn 1953 he decided to investigate after McCarthy, as chairman of the Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations, had held a series of hearings into an alleged spy ring at the Army Signal Corps laboratories at Fort Monmouth, New Jersey. The hearings had led to the suspension without pay of 33 employees.
Marder spent a week at Fort Monmouth and discovered that the “evidence” on which McCarthy based his allegations consisted of minor cases which had been dismissed by the Army. He set out his findings in a series of articles in November 1953 and, at a subsequent press conference, succeeded in forcing the Army Secretary, Robert Stevens, to admit that the Army had known that the allegations were false all along.
Marder’s investigations laid the groundwork for Senate hearings into McCarthy which began in April 1954 and led to a vote of censure. But Marder regretted that so few members of his own profession had cared to hold McCarthy to account, preferring to join the general hue and cry against alleged “Reds”. McCarthy “had built the thing so highly that it was sort of waiting for someone to come along and look at it. And nobody wanted to bother”.
Murrey Marder was born on August 8 1919 in Philadelphia, where his father ran a grocery business. After leaving school he worked as a copy boy at The Philadelphia Evening Public Ledger. During the Second World War he served in the Marines as a combat correspondent in the South Pacific.
He joined the city staff of the Washington Post in 1946, later moving to its national staff. In 1957 he opened the newspaper’s first foreign bureau in London and became the Post’s chief diplomatic correspondent.
In the 1960s Marder became something of a thorn in the side of the Johnson administration. The phrase “credibility gap”, which he coined in 1965 to describe the gulf between the White House’s version of the war in Vietnam and the much bleaker picture being drawn by reporters on the ground, got under the skin of the administration . Johnson, who had been elected in a landslide in 1964, saw public confidence in his honesty erode to the point that he decided not to seek re-election in 1968.
Yet Marder saw his coverage of Vietnam as his greatest failure. On August 2 1964 he had been in the State Department press office when news came that North Vietnamese torpedo boats had carried out an apparently unprovoked attack on two US destroyers (the Gulf of Tonkin incident). “I looked at this and I thought, well, that’s strange. I have been on torpedo boats. And torpedo boats are not equipped to attack destroyers,” Marder recalled later. Yet instead of asking questions the Washington Post, along with other major newspapers, had taken the editorial decision to endorse the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution, under which the Senate granted Johnson the authority to assist any South-East Asian country whose government was considered to be jeopardised by “communist aggression” – a measure that served as his legal justification for the war in Vietnam.
It was not until the publication of the so-called Pentagon Papers in 1971 that the full facts came out: Johnson had exaggerated the gravity of the Gulf of Tonkin attack, which in any case had come as the US assisted the South Vietnamese in clandestine raids on North Vietnam. The experience weighed heavily on Marder’s conscience. If the press and Congress had been doing their jobs, he felt, America would never have gone to war.
In 1996, after retiring from the Washington Post, he spent much of his pension savings to start a public interest journalism programme affiliated with Harvard University’s Nieman Foundation for Journalism.
Murrey Marder’s wife, Frances, predeceased him in 1996.
Murrey Marder, born August 8 1919, died March 11 2013

Guardian:

Our profession holds humanitarian values at the centre of our work, so we were heartened to hear President Obama’s pledge to close Guantánamo Bay. However, years later, detainees are still being held (Report, 24 May). The situation has become worse, with inmates on a hunger strike and reportedly being force-fed.
Any medical professional knows that patients with capacity to consent can refuse a treatment even if it is life-saving. Because of its invasive nature, the World Medical Association has repeatedly condemned force-feeding of competent prisoners. In its Malta declaration on hunger strikers, adopted in 1991 and revised in 2006, in large part because of developments at Guantánamo, the WMA states: “Even if intended to benefit, feeding accompanied by threats, coercion, force or use of physical restraints is a form of inhuman and degrading treatment.” The American Medical Association, a member of the WMA, has endorsed these unequivocal principles. AMA president Dr Jeremy Lazarus has said the force-feeding procedure at Guantánamo “violates core ethical values of the medical profession”. The UN has condemned force-feeding as both a form of torture and a breach of international law.
Medical professionals performing these procedures in Guantánamo are violating their professional code of conduct and the duties of a doctor, and so would be liable to scrutiny by their medical regulation body as a breach of their duties, and are breaking international law.
Dr Ihtesham Sabri
Dr D Nicholl
Dr F Haque
Dr M Khan
Dr A Farooq
Dr M Faraaz

Peter Wilby (They stole our school, 28 May) tells us that Summerhill is almost forgotten. Oh no, it’s not. Every year since 1993 there has been an International Democratic Education Network conference, held in a different country each year, attended by up to a thousand people from 30 or more countries. At these conferences, where many varieties of democratic education are represented, Summerhill is held in great respect. Moo Baan Dek in Thailand, a village for 300 abused, abandoned or orphaned children, describes itself as a Buddhist interpretation of Summerhill. Sudbury Valley in the US takes the Summerhill attitude to learning one step further and has no timetabled lessons at all: it is widely imitated, particularly in the Netherlands and Germany. In Tamil Nadu ABL (activity-based learning), based primarily on Montessori methods but which has much in common with Summerhill, has been introduced into 37,500 primary schools, with spectacular success, including an improvement of over 25% in results for Tamil, English and Maths in the first year after its introduction. Compared with such initiatives, Summerhill, with its 70 pupils, may seem insignificant, but its importance is out of all proportion to its size. It has survived over 80 years and remains an inspiration to many.
David Gribble
Co-ordinator, IDEN

The discussion of welfare by Ian Mulheirn (Comment, 27 May) and generally conflates two different payments. The first is illustrated by my state pension, which is based on 36 years of contributions (not on the 40 years I could have accumulated, had I not missed four years of national insurance payments). This and work pensions are all – with the exception of bankers’ contractually gold-plated handouts – based on contributions. You get out what you put in.
The second type of payment is insurance-based. These, like my car insurance, depend upon circumstance (need) and not on totals paid in. If I pile my car up in the first month of the insurance, I get the payout dependent upon circumstances, not on how many years I have held the insurance. If I get no “benefit” from my car insurance, I consider myself fortunate and have no feeling of envy for those who get paid for having their car written off.
It’s irrational to treat these two situations equally. If someone becomes unemployed, the support they need to find work again is the same no matter how long they have been in work. It is sad to see the Labour party allying itself with the “scroungers” litany.
David Horler
Bowness, Cumbria
• Now let’s get this straight (Aditya Chakrabortty, G2, 28 May): even in “prosperous” Sweden 25% of young Swedes are out of work, and 40%-plus in Spain and Portugal. Yet we apparently are faced with too many older people for the working population to support. Why is the top priority not to convert these millions of unemployed into earners who can support the ageing, rather than negatively reduce the living standards of both groups? Has nobody any constructive ideas? Anyone who has visited less-developed countries will have seen the crowds of unemployed young men who, probably out of resentment and boredom, are available for any kind of incitement to unrest.
Ralph Gordon
Romford, Essex

Perhaps there is another reason for the failure of the main political parties to capture the popular imagination, as witnessed by a depressing low voter turnout at elections (Comment, 28 May). Could it not be that our over-centralised political parties have lost the means to engage with the electorate? In the 90s it became the accepted wisdom that the problem for political parties was the local party activists, be it today’s “swivel-eyed loons” in the Tory party, or leftwing extremists (Militant) or now members of the Unite union in the Labour party, all of whom would pull the party in the direction of unpopular, voter-unfriendly policies.
Policies were imposed on the Labour party to minimise the influence of activists, including imposing candidates on local branches, suspending recalcitrant local branches that chose the “wrong candidate” and the rigging of party conferences to deny party activists a voice. An attitude best summed up in the words of a former Conservative leader, Andrew Bonar Law, who remarked that he would sooner take advice from his valet than the Conservative party conference. Both parties having actively discouraged party membership (activists) are left with a unrepresentative rump membership, of whom the party leaderships are still fearful.
Consequently policy is decided within the Westminster bunker, which can only produce “safe” policies designed to preserve as many members’ seats as possible, and so must appeal to the mythical middle group and not threaten the interests of any group. While electoral reform is necessary, what is more urgently required is a reform of the internal party structures that will once again make them representative popular parties. It is no coincidence that our undemocratic parties have failed to produce policies that would engage popular interest. Most voters would like action to tackle the obscene bankers’ bonuses, but our undemocratic parties don’t seem to regard it as a matter for serious action.
Derrick Joad
Leeds
• John Kampfner’s call for a more plural, multi-party, proportionate parliamentary system would enable a more passionate, issue-based politics to replace our moribund and discredited system. However, he appears incapable of thinking outside the box to create a genuine revolution in our politics. The problem with his solution is that it leads to shabby and fluid coalition politics such as we see in Israel. The duplicity and immorality of our Lib Dems supporting what are by historical comparisons the extreme rightwing policies enacted by the government, while contemplating the cognitive dissonance of sharing power with Labour after 2015, supporting a centre-left programme, is precisely what has alienated former Lib Dem supporters like myself.
There is a better alternative. We could have a modern model of separated powers (not the sclerotic US version), whereby the nation separately elects a premier with a programme for government, and a unicameral multi-party parliament (let’s get rid of the Lords) by proportional voting, adopting the sensible 5% minimum voting threshold to keep out extremist parties. This would deliver Kampfner’s issue-based passion, but avoid messy coalition-based executive cabinets. More importantly, it would generate the kind of engagement and public excitement that we often witness in presidential election campaigns.
Philip Wood
Kidlington, Oxfordshire

I profoundly disagree with Jonathan Freedland (When killers strike, should we listen to what they say?, May 25). As a leftwinger I think we should listen to what everyone has to say, including Muslim extremists and Anders Breivik. Extremism is just that: an extreme version of what a group of people think. One of the results of not listening to people’s fears around immigration is rightwing extremism of Breivik’s kind; one of the results of not listening to people’s disgust at invasions of Muslim countries is Muslim extremism. How can we end either kind of extremism if we won’t acknowledge its causes?
Clare Bainbridge
Crediton, Devon
• Today, 29 May, is the 60th anniversary of the first ascent of Everest (Report, 28 May) and my 60th birthday. I will be enjoying climbing Ben Nevis for free with my family. Those 700 who climb Everest for £50K each this season reveal the mountain’s current status as the ultimate tick-in-the-box packaged adventure commodity. Real adventurers must now seek true challenges elsewhere. I seek mine on Ben Nevis today as I did on Scafell on my 50th and Snowdon on my 40th.
David S Thompson
Shenstone, Staffordshire
• If your readers would like to “categorise” Man Booker International prize winner Lydia Davis’s short-short stories (Report, 23 May), they could use the now widely recognised term “flash fiction”.
Drs Peter Blair and Ashley Chantler
Editors, Flash: The International Short-Short Story Magazine
• Are there any non-bustling market towns (Letters, 27 May)? I suggest you try Market Weighton, Yorkshire, on a Sunday. Even the Saxon church was locked when we tried to visit on 26 May.
Alison Morley
Roundhay, Leeds
•  In recipes, parsley is always “flat-leaved”, pepper is usually “black”, and you always “add sea salt”. I find that dropping the adjectives rarely affects the final flavour.
Eva Lawrence
St Albans, Hertfordshire
• Why do sacked executives always “walk away” with large pensions?
Ann Lynch
Skipton, North Yorkshire

Apparently William Hague and the French have got their way, after all, and can now supply advanced weapons to the “moderately mad mullahs”, as your cartoonist Steve Bell aptly describes the likely recipients of the UK and France’s military largesse. You report (UK forces EU to lift arms embargo on Syrian rebels, 28 May) that 25 EU governments were opposed to, and only the UK and France were in favour of, supplying weapons to the “moderates”. Nevertheless, in the interests of “unity” the 25 conceded to the two. What does this say about European democracy? It will surely reinforce the view of those cynics who claim that, in the last analysis, EU governments will always be subservient to the interests of the US, whatever EU citizens may wish.
According to UN reports, the “truly mad mullahs” – that is, the al-Nusra brigades – are doing at least 75% of the fighting, so the advanced weapons will not for long remain in the hands of the so-called moderates. So we have the extraordinary situation that the UK government will supply weapons that will inevitably fall into the hands of people inspired by the same fanatical jihadist Islam as those responsible for the Woolwich atrocity.
Is there any chance that our parliament can reverse this decision to further stoke the fires of conflict in the Middle East? Here is a chance for those who oppose the EU on the grounds that it undermines British democracy, namely the anti-EU Tories and Ukip, to demand a vote on whether it is in the UK’s best interests for Syria to further descend into a sectarian hell, as has happened in Libya.
Dr David Hookes
Liverpool

•  It is nearly a century since Britain and France decided, in the Sykes-Picot agreement of 1916, how to carve up the Arab areas of the Ottoman empire between them. For much of that century there have been wars in the region: British suppression of revolts in Iraq, repeated Israeli-Arab wars resulting from the disastrous division of Palestine, the Lebanese civil war, the two Gulf wars and now a civil war in Syria. Whether due to malevolence or incompetence, the actions of Britain and France have led to continual bloodshed, and they ought to have learned their lesson by now that they are incapable of doing any good. Instead they claim to be entitled to send arms to selected rebels in Syria now that the EU arms embargo on Syria has not been renewed. That was of course the same policy as the US adopted in Afghanistan, where the result of 30 years of internecine warfare is a weak and corrupt government which may soon be swept away.
Anthony Matthew
Leicester
•  A soldier is hacked to death on the streets of London by jihadists. Days later, William Hague persuades the EU to end Syria’s arms embargo so we can provide weapons which will certainly fall into the hands of jihadists – who will, in turn, pose an even greater threat to democracy and human rights than Assad. It would be interesting to know which government, interest group or weapons supplier is jerking the Foreign Office’s chain.
Jean Calder
Brighton
• It is not without irony that while the ink is still drying on the recently brokered arms trade treaty, the UK and France have pressured other EU member states to lift the arms embargo on Syria. It is quite unclear how the foreign secretary believes flooding the war-ravaged region with more ammunition will help broker peace, and even less clear how he intends to ensure that the weapons stay in the “right” hands. Notably, however, the UK and France are the only member states so assured that arming the rebels is the way forward for Syria. Is it simply a coincidence that they are also the largest two arms manufacturing countries in the EU?
David Martin MEP
Labour, Scotland
•  In these days of unprecedented domestic austerity, it must be relevant to ask how much it will cost the taxpayer to arm the Syrian rebels – contrary to UN and EU policy – and indeed how many Syrians we might now expect to kill for the money?
Des McConaghy
Liverpool
• There seems to be a civil war in Iraq, Mr Hague. Should we send in weapons?
Peter Needham
Ulverston, Cumbria

So, the odious Robert Mugabe is now featured as a rehabilitated garlanded figure on the front page of Guardian Weekly (The rehabilitation of Mugabe, 17 May). In prose more suited to Hello magazine, your correspondent describes this internationally vilified figure as one who is now winning “sympathetic audiences”, enjoying “cordial meetings” and “coming back in from the cold”. The article barely refers to the past brutalities that Mugabe and his henchmen have inflicted on his nation’s citizens, devoting most of the remainder to the shortcomings of his political opponents.
Since taking office Mugabe has systematically devastated Zimbabwe, transforming what was once the breadbasket of southern Africa into an international basket case. Graft, corruption, intimidation, brutality, assassinations and murders on a grand scale have all been part of his modus operandi. Small wonder that this corrupt culture has seeped into all corners of government and society – including his opposition.
Mugabe began his reign of terror in 1983 by using the North Korean 5th Brigade to slaughter 20,000 Ndebele tribespeople (his “opposition”). Since then, apart from the feeble imposition of sanctions, the world has shrugged its shoulders and looked away as the horrors have continued for several decades.
How delighted Mugabe must now be! Will he be held accountable for his crimes? Will the voices of those crying for justice be heeded? Apparently not. Instead, this tyrant has been given a front-page endorsement from an internationally respected newspaper that prides itself on objective journalism.
Garlands all round, comrades!
John Reynolds
Auckland, New Zealand
• The question about Robert Mugabe is who rehabilitated whom? Zimbabwe’s history offers an answer. After more than a century of white rule, Zimbabwe gained independence in 1980 under majority black rule following the British-organised Lancaster House Conference (LHC). At the time that Zimbabwe gained independence, 6,000 white farmers owned 80% of the arable land. The blacks had no equity in the nation’s wealth, nor voting or human rights. The blacks had been forced into tribal areas with no hope of a better life elsewhere.
One of the basic tenets of Mugabe’s call for independence was land reform. At the LHC, the UK agreed to compensate Zimbabwe to enable a buyout of “white” farms so as to distribute land to the blacks. The UK subsequently reneged. Mugabe then moved to compulsorily acquire “white” farms, to divide the land into small blocks and distribute it to poor landless blacks.
Zimbabwe’s economic downturn started with this move. The blacks had no skills in land management, and no money to buy equipment. The west placed trade sanctions on Zimbabwe. This led to food shortages and a section of the population rose against Mugabe.
Morgan Tsvangarai, the opposition leader, claimed that he could bring peace if power was transferred to him. But the only thing Tsvangarai could have done was to drive out black landowners. This would have led to a bloodbath.
After several years of hardship, the blacks have learned farming skills. In 2011, the GDP of Zimbabwe increased by 9%, one of the highest in the world, showing that Mugabe’s land reform is working. The west is now prepared to lift sanctions.
Mugabe’s courage, political skill and determination have led his people to victory. And the answer to the question is that Mugabe rehabilitated the west.
Bill Mathew
Melbourne, Australia
• Robert Mugabe presided over the massacre of tens of thousands in the Matabele region of Zimbabwe in his earlier days, and later orchestrated the murder of thousands of others, including white farmers many of whom were British citizens and war veterans. While all this was going on there was scarcely a murmur of dissent from the international community and only the weakest of sanctions imposed, but rarely enforced.
Obviously some tyrants earn the ire of the human rights groups, international courts etc, and others don’t. It would be nice to know what the criteria are.
John Smuts
Brisbane, Australia
Money: scourge of the rich
What a powerful article George Monbiot has written (Money just makes the rich suffer, 17 May). Somewhere deep down, of course, we all know it. But Monbiot has spelt it out clearly in quotable manifesto language. A sample: “it [capitalism] has given us wealth beyond measure, but has taken away the chief benefit of wealth: the consciousness of having enough”.
I can’t help but think that if more articles like this were written and read by the right people, recessions and credit crunches would not occur so often or with the intensity of the present one. This article or similar articles should be obligatory reading for politicians, managers, bankers, university students, and if they have the guts to face facts, the rich themselves.
Kevin O’Byrne
Duisburg, Germany
Try to understand abortion
Oscar Wilde’s quote, “There is no sin except stupidity”, comes easily to mind when reading the mindless activities of the anti-abortionists in the US in the article Anti-abortionists triumphing across the US (17 May). Women got the right to vote in the 20th century, we got recognised as legal human beings in the 1920s and we fought to be in charge of our bodies in the 1970s. This battle was fought and won; it can’t be undone.
It is sickening when women today are vilified for taking control of their bodies and the women and doctors are attacked. It is disgusting how this “pro-life” types are only interested in the baby before it’s born, but after they cease to care.
Do these people in their fanaticism even attempt to find assistance for these girls and women that have to abort? Not hand-patting counselling, but to help get these girls and women a job?
No. Women and girls who choose to abort don’t do it just because it’s just something to do. They do it because they are under stress, financially, socially, emotionally, mentally, and there is no other way out.
If the “pro-life” camp wants to bring about a peaceful end to the need for abortions, then they should take an interest in the women and their lives and take an interest in the baby once it’s born. Find out why these things have to happen.
But in the meantime, every body of the female sex belongs to one person and one person only. What she does or doesn’t do with it is her choice. Everyone else should back off.
Yasmin Wooldridge
Edenwold, Saskatchewan, Canada
• Both your headline and, to a lesser extent, the attendant article, grossly misrepresent the state of women’s rights in the United States. They lead the reader to believe that the recent abortion legislation in five atypical states represents a national trend (“sweeping through many parts of America”), thus wholly ignoring the remaining 45 United States. And where are the states in which this phenomenon has been identified? Four of them were members of the old slave-owning Southern Confederacy, where today not only is abortion challenged, but so too are evolution, climate change and the first amendment prohibition against an established religion. The fifth state, and the dateline of the article, is North Dakota, in which reside no more than 0.02% of the national population. It is hardly surprising that Mississippi (which only three months ago finally ratified the 13th constitutional amendment abolishing slavery), or Texas (which has pressured commercial publishers to include creationism in public school textbooks) are hostile to any liberalisation of abortion law.
Andrew Horn
Cambridge, Massachusetts, US
Navigating the moral maze
Peter Beaumont’s article, Syria and the moral maze of intervention (10 May), forms a sensible political critique of the Responsibility to Protect (R2P) doctrine’s international perception. However, the argument that there is a disincentive to negotiate is questionable.
R2P is an extrapolation of the Hobbesian state system. People surrender their means of violence to the sovereign, who maintains a monopoly on violence for the purpose of human security.
Given that in the 20th century, people were more than seven times more likely to be killed by their own state, the R2P doctrine has formed from the state’s failure to provide human security. R2P gives the international community responsibility for human security.
Sean Nicolson
Brisbane, Australia
Vote with your money
It’s an unfortunate truth, Fashion still doesn’t give a damn (10 May). But sadly neither does the average consumer. Rather than idly watching the evening news, deploring the ethics of the clothing giants, vote with your dollar. It’s really quite simple: the nature of supply and demand gives consumers the power to remove the demand and thus encourage business to better their supply. If we sit on our hands and wait for big business to give a damn, things will never change. Let’s start our own collective action and make buying sweat-shop-free products desirable – let’s “be the change we want to see in the world”. The time is now.
Candace Davis
Roma, Queensland, Australia
Briefly
• So Chris Huhne is released after only a quarter of his sentence has been served in prison (17 May). Aren’t the authorities in the least bit worried that he might persuade his current partner to wear his electronic tag for him?
Alan Williams-Key
Madrid, Spain
• “I’ve got to get a pair of cat handcuffs and I’ve got to get them now!” – Steve Martin.
Was it chutzpah or temerity that spurred Gareth Morgan to take on the old babas and their moggies on Steward Island (17 May)? Doesn’t he know of Rome’s 300,000 feral cats and their tenacious guardians?
But no need to terminate with extreme prejudice: bell her and top up her kibble, then there’ll be no more wee presents on the stoop. To tell the truth, my cairn terrier is much more bloodthirsty for anything that moves, or recently did.
R M Fransson
Denver, Colorado, US
• Stem-cell cloning breakthrough (17 May): could we now manufacture ivory? And then flood the market with cheap, “real” ivory, which should drop its value enough to protect elephants from poachers.
Richard Blackburn
Coogee, NSW, Australia

Independent:

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Thanks to William Hague, the EU embargo on sending weapons to the Syrian rebels has collapsed. His reasons for putting an end to the embargo are that some Syrians need weapons for self-defence, arming the “moderate” rebels will reduce the violence in Syria, and the threat of providing arms will improve the chances of Assad attending peace talks. None of these is credible.
There is no way to ensure that weapons will go to those who will use them for self-defence rather than to wage war on the Syrian government. There is no ground for claiming that arming any rebels will do anything other than add to the bloodshed in Syria. It is likely that threats will tend to make Assad more intransigent rather than anything else.
It is hard for decent people to watch the suffering in Syria. Clearly all possibilities to bring about a peaceful end to this catastrophe must be exhausted before resorting to proxy war (which even then may not be justified).
The US government should urgently engage in talks with Russia, Iran and its own regional allies aimed at bringing about a complete end to the flow of weapons into Syria. The full weight of the British government should be thrown into ensuring that the planned peace conference in Geneva takes place and is a success. If it does not succeed the next step should be to aggressively step up diplomatic efforts to end the crisis, rather than abandon them.
Brendan O’Brien, London N21
Lee Rigby is hacked to death on the streets of London by jihadists. Days later, William Hague persuades the EU to end the Syria arms embargo so we can legally provide weapons which will certainly fall into the hands of jihadists – who will pose an even greater threat to democracy and human rights than Assad.
It would be interesting to know which government, interest group or weapons supplier is jerking the Foreign Office’s chain.
Jean Calder, Brighton
Is William Hague becoming another Blair? Can he not see what will happen if he sends arms to these Syrian rebels? Saudi Arabia and the Sunni Gulf states are already supplying arms. This is a war between Arabs and he must not interfere.
M Finn, Hednesford, Staffordshire
War heroes: rhetoric and reality
Most readers will have been disgusted by your report (28 May), that two veteran soldiers, who were disabled serving their country in Afghanistan, were subject to humiliating assessments resulting in denial of support and benefits. It is important that ordinary people focus on those responsible for inflicting this disgrace on honourable men.
True, Atos Healthcare, which won the £200m government contract and carries out these assessments, is regularly reported in the media as responsible for such horrendous treatment, but the company is the servant of the Work and Pensions Department, headed by Iain Duncan Smith, who is responsible to the Cabinet.
The Cabinet’s collective leader is the Prime Minister, David Cameron. Politicians create smoke and mirrors, hoping to deflect blame, and Cameron, who regularly spouts supportive rhetoric about our war heroes, knows full well the crisis they face.
Derek Marks, Dundee
The Friday afternoon GP
Dr Grahame Randall’s letter (27 May) struck a chord with me. A few months ago my 90-year-old aunt became ill enough for us to call her doctor. One of the practice partners obligingly came, late on a Friday afternoon, and pronounced her ill but gave the opinion that she would be better cared for at home rather than in hospital. 
He then departed, without having ascertained what “care at home” might mean. He therefore failed to establish that my aunt depended on a devoted but over-stretched carer who was paid for 10 hours per week, supplemented by quick visits from me (living nearby but aged 74 and responsible for a severely disabled husband).
The resulting weekend was a nightmare of phone calls to find and then contact the rapid response team via social services, during which, as I raced between our houses, both my husband and my aunt fell, necessitating visits from the ambulance service to lift them.
By Monday we had established a care package and we all relaxed. My aunt died on Tuesday.
Her GP, summoning what one might call the Macbeth defence option, said she might have died in hospital anyway. He may well have been right, but if he had taken five minutes to understand her needs and to give us a minimum of information as to supplementary home care, her last few days could at least have been calm and peaceful.
Perhaps Dr Grahame Randall would have dealt differently with such a case.
name and address supplied
GPs seem to be blamed for many of the ills of the NHS at present (letters, 27 May) and most of this criticism is remarkably uninformed. The most popular clamours are for GPs to organise and take part in out-of-hours services again and for GPs to be more available in the daytime. 
It is not difficult to see that these are mutually incompatible unless I go back to my old habits of working all night and working the next day. I fail to see a solution unless we have a huge increase in GP numbers. 
The other factor is that we do not stop working when the surgery doors close at 6pm. The Government has given us so many extra and quite unnecessary targets to achieve that I am regularly doing paperwork until 9pm several evenings every week.  
People are probably unaware that considerably less than  50 per cent of my work is  face-to-face with patients. I am approaching retirement and the present climate is not encouraging me to continue to work increasing hours at an increased pace. 
Along with thousands more GPs in my situation, early retirement seems an attractive option. Oh, how I would love Jeremy Hunt to spend a day with me to find out what really happens in general practice.
Dr Charles Fletcher, Ripon, North Yorkshire
Happy cows on big dairy farms
Simon Pope (letter, 22 May) maintains that planning approval for a 1,000-cow dairy farm in Powys will set a precedent. He fails to acknowledge the dozens of dairy farms with more than 1,000 cows already operating quietly and successfully in Britain.
The RSPCA has just published an opinion that size of dairy farm is not the key issue in relation to welfare; conditions, stockmanship and overall husbandry are the factors which contribute to the welfare status of the animals. It is whether the farming operation, regardless of size, can meet the welfare needs of each individual animal that really matters.
For decades, our dairy farmers have been leaving the industry. New entrants and expansion of existing herds can no longer keep pace with this decline, and we ended last year 14 per cent below our target.
A vibrant industry will include all shapes and sizes of business, but without larger farms we will be in an even worse position, importing more from countries with lower welfare and quality standards.
Amy Jackson, Freeland, Oxfordshire
An odd kind  of ‘betrayal’
However many times I hear variations on the theme of the letter from Julian Self (17 May) – essentially, that Nick Clegg and the Lib Dems betrayed their voters by going into coalition – I have never been able to understand the logic.
By going into coalition with the Conservatives, the Lib Dems have been able to deliver much of the party’s 2010 manifesto, for example: guaranteed big pension rises every year; more money for schools with the most disadvantaged pupils; and lifting millions of the lowest-paid people out of paying income tax.
Surely betrayal would have occurred if the party had had the opportunity to enter into government and implement some of its platform, but had run away and therefore implemented none of it. The party was never going to be able to deliver it all, given that it won just 57 of 650 seats.
Stuart Bonar, Plymouth
Cameron’s PR coup misfires
Last Thursday, following the tragic events at Woolwich, Downing Street briefed, and the BBC repeated throughout the day, that “David Cameron would today chair an emergency meeting of the Cobra committee”. This appeared to be an opportunistic attempt to demonstrate our PM’s indispensability and authority following his recent troubles over Europe and gay marriage.
A few days later we are treated to our regular posed picture of the Camerons on holiday abroad, and Dominic Lawson (28 May) is bemused by the tabloid reaction to the PM’s absence. Perhaps a case of the PR machine being too successful?
Brian Rogan, West Wickham,  Kent
Bordering on the absurd
T C Bell writes (letter, 27 May) that the “business elite who wish to stay in the EU fail to answer how Britain can protect its borders”. Have they been asked that question? If not, they have nothing to answer.
I am far from being a member of that elevated group, but I ask T C Bell why he thinks that business should concern itself with border protection. Border control is a national concern whose strategy is driven by government policy. Is he proposing that border control should be privatised? 
Jon Summers, Petton, Devon
Till the fat  person sings
While I am in accord with Celia Jordan on the degendering of female occupations (letter, 27 May), there is no need for her to moot the idea that “singesses” might have been the word for female singers. In the past the word “songstress” was acceptable – fortunately seldom (if at all) used nowadays.
John P Sheldon, Holbrook,  Derbyshire
And “duchesses” and “princesses”?
Ephrem Lash, London N7
Blast-off
Will Nigel Farage be angry or proud that the UK has paid the European Space Agency £16m to send the British astronaut, Major Tim Peake, into space?
Ian McKenzie, Lincoln

Times:

Is it the right way forward to erode the personal liberties of everyone in order to catch potential terrorists?
Sir, You report that the Home Secretary is attempting to revive the Communications Data Bill which would enable the police and intelligence agencies to monitor who speaks to whom on the internet (“May sparks row with call to save ‘snooper’s charter’ ”, May 27). The Liberal Democrats oppose the Bill on grounds of civil liberties and have blocked its progress.
I ask myself wherein lies the greater danger: the remote possibility that the authorities might find my emails of any interest, or the more likely possibility that some of my fellow citizens might be killed or injured by terrorists because the authorities cannot access their electronic communications. In current circumstances where terrorism is a real threat, the protection of civil liberties must necessarily involve subordinating the rights of individuals to the right of the public at large not to be murdered on the streets.
Michael Patterson
Swineshead, Lincs
Sir, The Home Secretary’s attempt to revive the “snoopers’ charter” reminds me of Hayek’s quote in The Road to Serfdom: “ ‘Emergencies’ have always been the pretext on which the safeguards of individual liberty have eroded.”
If we give up a little bit of liberty towards the government, it will be slowly eroded away over time. This has been evident since the declaration of the “War on Terror” in 2001, in which Parliament granted the government tremendous powers to fight terrorism.
We should take advice from Benjamin Franklin: “They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety, deserve neither liberty nor safety.”
We cannot allow the Home Secretary to revive the snooper’s charter that will give government huge powers that will undermine our rights, liberties and privacy.
James A. Paton
Billericay, Essex
Sir, Jamie Bartlett’s article on the Islamist killing of a British soldier (Opinion, May 27) calls into question his and Demos’s science and objectivity. Far from there being a decline in acts of terrorism, official police figures show that in 2011-12 they increased by 40 per cent over the previous year. His suggestion that the virulent speeches of Anjem Choudary have little if any impact is as foolish as his claim that support for the ideas of al-Qaeda is simply “anti-establishment chic”. Choudary and others like him give heart to those who demand beheadings: why are we suprised when this happens? Neither Bartlett nor anyone else outside our security community has any accurate idea of whether the numbers of terrorists are on the increase or not.
It is tasteless that Demos should be making its self-serving “softly-softly” case less than a week since Drummer Rigby’s murder. When Bartlett adds that “there is a case for … reviving the Communications Data Bill”, he is right. But at the time the matter was being debated he found himself, to put it mildly, in a very different place.
First, it is high time MI5 treated us like adults and produced a spokesman who could give us a proper estimate of the threat we face. Second, since MI5 tragically failed to prevent the killing in Woolwich last week, the Government should at once provide the Service with the resources it clearly requires to ensure that those coming across its radar are properly dealt with.
Anthony Glees
Woodstock, Oxon

Somewhat embarrassed memories of meeting the Everest mountaineer George Lowe, in the company of Edmund Hillary at Rome airport
Sir, I read your obituary of the Everest mountaineer George Lowe with great interest (March 23). I was lucky enough to meet him. It was during the school summer holidays in 1953 when I was 13. My mother was taking my younger brother and myself to visit our father in Calcutta. In those days non-stop flights were still in the future. We shared a breakfast table at Rome airport with Edmund Hillary and Mr Lowe. This was shortly after Hillary and Tenzing’s glorious ascent of Everest. My brother and I were in awe of the great hero Hillary, and he gave us his autograph. We had never heard of George Lowe, so all our attention was focused on Hillary. My mother, out of politeness, said, “Mr Lowe, do you climb as well?” to which he replied, “Yes, I do a bit.” We finished our meal and said goodbye.
Years later my mother read The Ascent of Everest by John Hunt, the expedition leader. She told me that when she came across the name of George Lowe, and learnt that he did rather more than “climb a bit”, but had been chosen to make an attempt on the summit of Everest ahead of Hillary, she was mortified with embarrassment. If the weather had been more co-operative, it would have been Sir George Lowe who became the household name.
Alan Bonner
Beckenham, Kent

Several wild fish and invertebrate species are at dangerously low levels because of the ecological status of our rivers
Sir, The State of Nature report (“Wild Britain on a wing and a prayer”, May 22) focuses on the alarming collapse of terrestrial species and marine animals. Britain’s freshwater environment is in just as parlous a state, despite regular Environment Agency statements implying that our waterways are healthier than at any time for decades. In fact, fewer than a third of our rivers achieve good ecological status under EU designation, and several wild fish and invertebrate species are at dangerously low levels. Atlantic salmon fail to reach their conservation targets on most of their English and Welsh rivers; the blue-winged olive, which once swarmed in vast numbers, is missing from many streams.
This association believes that unless we have more political commitment in the UK to protecting and restoring wildlife, terrestrial and aquatic — with appropriate management policies and resources — more species will face local and national extinction, and our own lives will be the poorer for it.
Paul Knight
Salmon & Trout Association
Fordingbridge, Hants

Despite a recent poll about the use of controlled drugs by students, the figures should be taken with a pinch of salt
Sir, Your report that all but a few students use controlled drugs (May 22) acknowledged the survey should be taken with “a pinch of salt”. However, no amount of sceptical seasoning can disguise the fishiness of these figures. The following call was made to invite participation in the poll; “Drugs! Everyone does them, but which ones do you do?” This guarantees that few drug abstainers would respond.
The Independent Scientific Committee on Drugs believes that objective evidence on drug consumption is needed to inform policy choices, and also personal choices. We are strongly influenced by our beliefs about what other people are getting up to. Research shows that students overestimate the quantities of sex and drugs that their friends are enjoying, so inflated figures for drug use could be self-fulfilling.
Professor David Nutt
Chair, Independent Scientific Committee on Drugs, Centre for Crime and Justice Studies
London SW8

The man responsible for Bank Holiday Monday intended the time to be filled usefully, with reading and exercise
Sir, John Lubbock (“The man who made your Bank Holiday Monday”, May 27) did not expect the day of leisure to be passed in idle merriment. Londoners in particular had no excuse for failing to take brisk exercise. As a champion of open spaces in the 1870s, Lubbock helped to stop greedy private developers seizing Blackheath, Hampstead Heath and other public parks. For the more cerebral he published a list of the 100 best books which included Aristotle, Spinoza and Descartes. He was encouraged by the success of his own authoritative work on ants, bees and wasps which went through five editions in a year. He was convinced that dogs as well as humans could profit from his scholarship, and spent long hours trying to make canines literate.
Lord Lexden
London SW1

Telegraph:
SIR – If the security forces have made specific mistakes that contributed to the terrorist attack in Woolwich then these errors need to be identified, and steps taken to reduce the risk of them being made again (Comment, May 27).
It would be naive to think that while Islamist extremists are engaged in a “war” with Britain, that every act of terrorism, particular acts of sheer barbarity as opposed to the complex plots, can be prevented. As the IRA infamously pointed out, to kill, terrorists only have to get lucky once; we have to get lucky every time.
Christopher Drummond
Whitehaven, Cumbria
SIR – It is not surprising that we have witnessed the atrocity in Woolwich so close to home. The hundreds and thousands of innocent civilian deaths in Iraq, and to a lesser extent Afghanistan, will provoke the kind of hatred we have recently witnessed.
A full tally has been kept of all British and American military deaths, but there is no record of the far greater number of innocent civilian deaths caused by British and American military action in a war, in the case of Iraq, of questionable legality with no clear end strategy.
Related Articles
DofE walkers cannot be blamed for litter trails
28 May 2013
Peter Hatvany
Salisbury, Wiltshire
SIR – As security services struggle to protect us at home, the Foreign Secretary argues for arming more secular factions of Syria’s rebel movement (report, May 27).
Iraq, Egypt, Afghanistan and Libya have shown how difficult it can be to identify friend and foe, or to forecast outcomes in regions riddled with tribal and sectarian hostilities. A Damascus mother summed it up: “I don’t like this government, but does the West really think that this opposition would be any better?”
Robert Stephenson
Henley-on-Thames, Oxfordshire
SIR – David Cameron has been criticised for not returning from his holiday to participate in the fall-out from the Woolwich murder. He needs quality time for the sake of his family, his health and his well-being. We all need to get away; the Prime Minister is no different.
Paul Caruana
Truro, Cornwall
SIR – Margaret Thatcher said that publicity was the oxygen of terrorism. No doubt, she would have supported the reporting of the facts about the atrocity in Woolwich, as we all do. However the behaviour of the BBC in granting a Newsnight interview to Anjem Choudary, the radical cleric, is surely reprehensible.
Graham Dawber
Wilmslow, Cheshire
SIR – When Mrs Thatcher tried to deny terrorists (at that time, the IRA) the “oxygen of publicity”, the BBC broadcast their statements read by actors.
Will the BBC now broadcast the sermons of radical Islamist preachers read out by actors?
W G Sellwood
Stafford
Interpol’s databases
SIR – The case involving William Browder, head of the Hermitage Capital Investment Foundation, shows how Interpol’s handling of personal data helps to keep the world safer, while protecting both the rights of individuals and the national sovereignty of Interpol’s 190 member countries.
Earlier this month, the Russian Federation sought the location of Mr Browder via Interpol. Interpol’s rules allow an individual to challenge the sending of personal data through Interpol channels; and this is what William Browder did.
On May 24, the Commission for the Control of Interpol’s Files ruled that the Russian Federation’s request was political, and therefore prohibited. It recommended that all data relating to this request, and to Mr Browder be deleted – a decision Interpol immediately implemented.
Some commentators on this case wrongly stated that the Russian Federation and other countries should not be able to use Interpol’s communication channels as “punishment” if they are found to have broken Interpol’s rules. Imagine if the Russian Federation wanted to share information on a suspected terrorist – as it did on Boston marathon bombing suspect – but could not use Interpol’s network.
Interpol’s network allows countries to share information about people both under investigation or sought for arrest. But that information does not legally bind any member country to take any action. Even the most controversial of cases involving Interpol demonstrates that the public needs to be better informed about Interpol, not that Interpol needs to be reformed.
Ronald K Noble
Secretary General, Interpol
Lyon, Rhône, France
Ferrying dogs
SIR – As a regular traveller with my dog across the Channel by ferry, I have an up-to-date dog passport, signed and stamped by my vet.
On my last visit, the dog was not allowed to travel because the relevant page on its passport was full. The following page had been used three times, but I was told that this should not have been allowed.
I missed my boat and ended up having to buy a new French passport for my dog in order to board the ferry. Now, I have to pay 30 euros every time I travel.
Maxine Morjan
Barneveld, Holland
Weight loss wonder
SIR – I write in support of the new 5:2 diet, where you eat what you want for five days and are only allowed 600 calories a day for men, 500 for women for the other two days.
I am 70 and have been overweight all my life, until now. My wife and I started the 5:2 last October, and kept it up for six months. We have now returned to a more normal regime with an occasional 600 calorie day if we have overindulged. Our joint weight loss was over 3 stone.
Having dieted most of my life, I feel that finally my weight is under control.
James McLean
Edinburgh
Spread out holidays
SIR – I was looking in my diary to ascertain the date of Easter 2014 and realised that it will be very late, with Easter Monday falling on April 21. The May Day bank holiday will be on May 5 and the spring bank holiday on May 26. There is just five weeks between these dates.
Therefore, I propose that the May Day holiday is scrapped, and a suitable date is selected for a true national celebration.
Sally A Williams
Dinas Cross, Pembrokeshire
BBC technology decline
SIR – The recent BBC technology disaster is no surprise, considering how little of its engineering structure remains (“Scrapped, BBC’s £100m IT project”, report May 27).
I worked with, not for, the BBC for many years, both in industry and government. Then engineering and technology in the BBC had a number of complementary strands with a high degree of independence. This ensured that any technological proposal was stringently reviewed, in terms of practicality and economy. There was the research division at Kingswood Warren, design offices at Western House, equipment department in Chiswick and a studio planning and installation department.
Communication with the world at large was through the engineering information department. These various sections reported to the director of engineering. He was so significant that on his retirement he always received a knighthood.
This structure and the people in it had the respect of industry and governments world-wide. The BBC and Independent Broadcasting Authority used to lead the world in broadcasting technology.
Bernadette Rogers
Daventry, Northamptonshire
Absent swallows
SIR – I am pleased that Judy Potter (Letters, May 20) has seen the swallows return above her house; I have not been so lucky.
Twenty years ago, I had 30 to 40 swallows that regularly returned at the start of May. Last year, I saw only six in the field behind my house, but this year I haven’t seen one.
It is very upsetting that the numbers have decreased so dramatically.
Janet Parker
Solihull, West Midlands
Must have mobile
SIR – I am no luddite; however, I am not particularly enthusiastic about telephones, especially mobiles. I far prefer the internet.
But I have noticed a new trend: increasingly, online traders require a prospective purchaser to supply a mobile telephone number, and will not allow the transaction to be completed without one. I always ask for confirmation by email, never by telephone, but, no mobile number, no deal. Is this going to be the norm?
I do have a mobile but it is hardly ever switched on. I always give my wife’s number, but nobody calls her.
E S Eilley
Reigate, Surrey
How to tax foreign-based multinational firms
SIR – The public are becoming exasperated at the tiny amounts of tax that foreign-based multinational companies pay. It
is unbelievable that Google paid only £6 million in corporation tax (Business, May 27).
Rather than find new ways of countering their tax-avoiding methodology on profits, it would be far easier to introduce an agreed additional flat-rate tax on sales within all individual countries. A 2 per cent tax on Google’s £3.2 billion sales in Britain would ensure a more equitable £64 million contribution to Britain’s coffers. A tax based on sales figures would circumvent the industrial-scale tax avoidance that large multinational companies indulge in.
B J Colby
Bristol
SIR – The problem we have with companies such as Google paying their “fair share” of tax arises because all governments have fostered low-tax jurisdictions for political and economic expediency. Why else do the Isle of Man and Channel Islands enjoy lower rates of corporation tax than the rest of Britain?
All companies like Google are doing is playing the game as devised by politicians.
Dr David Cottam
Lingfield, Surrey

SIR – The Government says that a fair justice system with “fair outcomes” is essential in our democratic society, and that legal aid is the “hallmark of a fair, open justice system”. In our justice system, judicial review is the means by which the courts restrain public bodies when they act unlawfully. Access to judicial review is therefore essential to the rule of law.
We are senior counsel who specialise in judicial review. We act for and against public bodies. We are gravely concerned that practical access to judicial review is now under threat. The Legal Aid, Sentencing and Punishment of Offenders Act 2012 already severely limits legal aid for judicial review. The Government acknowledges that the scope for further savings is very small. Nevertheless, only eight days after LASPO came into force, the Ministry of Justice published proposals which would further remove legal aid for judicial review. These include refusing any legal aid to those who do not meet a residence test; refusing to pay lawyers in some cases for work reasonably and necessarily carried out; removing legal aid for complaints of mistreatment in prison; preventing small specialist public law firms from offering prison law advice; removing funding for test cases (whose prospects are by definition uncertain); and cutting rates for legal advice and representation still further.
The cumulative effect of these proposals will seriously undermine the rule of law, and Britain’s global reputation for justice. They are likely to drive conscientious and dedicated specialist public law practitioners and firms out of business. They will leave many of society’s most vulnerable people without access to any specialist legal advice and representation. In practice, these changes will immunise Government and other public authorities from effective legal challenge.
Abuses by UK agents and officials overseas that hitherto have been subject to the scrutiny of British courts will now, in practice attract impunity. People whose lives are affected by the unlawful action of public bodies will have no option but to try to represent themselves. Effective representation will be one-sided: the Government will continue to pay for, and be represented by specialist lawyers.
At the same time, the Ministry of Justice is proposing changes to criminal legal aid which will deny choice and effective representation to those accused of crimes, leading to a rapid and probably irreversible fall in standards of representation. We urge the Government to withdraw these unjust proposals.
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Leading barristers warn over impact of legal aid cuts
28 May 2013
Andrew Arden QC
Alex Bailin QC
Kieron Beal QC
Michael Beloff QC
Cherie Booth QC
Paul Bowen QC
Stanley Brodie QC
Paul Brown QC
Monica Carss-Frisk QC
John Cavanagh QC
Richard Clayton QC
Jason Coppel QC
Philip Coppel QC
Charles Cory-Wright QC
Stephen Cragg QC
Tom de la Mare QC
Marie Demetriou QC
Richard Drabble QC
Michael Fordham QC
Alison Foster QC
Danny Friedman QC
Neil Garnham QC
Nigel Giffin QC
Jonathan Glasson QC
Lord (Peter) Goldsmith QC
James Goudie QC
Richard Gordon QC
Eleanor Grey QC
Sam Grodzinski QC
Stephen Grosz QC
Philip Havers QC
Javan Herberg QC
Richard Hermer QC
Mark Hoskins QC
Raza Husain QC
Jeremy Johnson QC
Sean Jones QC
Philippa Kaufmann QC
Hugo Keith QC
Baroness (Helena) Kennedy QC
Tim Kerr QC
Julian B Knowles QC
James Laddie QC
Elisabeth Laing QC
Lord (Anthony) Lester QC
Natalie Lieven QC
Thomas Linden QC
Angus McCullough QC
Lord (Ken) MacDonald QC
Kate Markus (former Chair, Public Law Project)
James Maurici QC
Karon Monaghan QC
Clare Montgomery QC
Fenella Morris QC
Philip Moser QC
Tim Mould QC
Helen Mountfield QC
Gordon Nardell QC
Stephen Nathan QC
Aidan O’Neill QC
Tim Otty QC
Tim Owen QC
Lord (David) Pannick QC
Timothy Pitt-Payne QC
Tony Peto QC
Nigel Pleming QC
Jenni Richards QC
Aidan Robertson QC
Dinah Rose QC
Matthew Ryder QC
Pushpinder Saini QC
Professor Philippe Sands QC
Mark Shaw QC
Clive Sheldon QC
Jessica Simor QC
Kassie Smith QC
Hugh Southey QC
Daniel Stilitz QC
James Strachan QC
Timothy Straker QC
Jemima Stratford QC
Rhodri Thompson QC
Hugh Tomlinson QC
Stephen Tromans QC
Jon Turner QC
David Vaughan QC
Martin Westgate QC
Sean Wilken QC
Ian Wise QC
David Wolfe QC

Irish Times:

Sir, – We believe fatal foetal abnormalities should be included in the proposed Protection of Life during Pregnancy Bill 2013. Ireland argued in D v Ireland at the European Court of Human Rights in 2006 that fatal foetal abnormalities could be argued to be covered by Article 40.3.3. There is a moral responsibility on the Government to vindicate that position.
Dr Ruth Fletcher, of Keele University, in her submission to the Joint Committee on Health and Children, recommended that the unborn should be defined not to mean those foetuses which have lethal abnormalities and will not have a future independent life.
Every year, women with fatal foetal anomaly pregnancies face inhuman treatment by being forced to make the harrowing journey to the Foetal Medicine Unit in Liverpool; without compassion from the Irish State. They travel at significant personal, financial and emotional cost, often in isolation, abandoned by the Irish health services. Such women require non-judgmental care in a familiar supportive environment, yet must face the tragic bureaucracy of having to arrange the return of their child’s remains to Ireland, if they choose.
The stigma of travelling abroad may be heightened by the current wording of the Heads of Bill. This is because such Irish women will receive a medical treatment which is deemed a criminal offence if performed in the Republic, with up to 14 years imprisonment.
The Irish College of General Practitioners supported a motion at its AGM calling on the Government to include within the proposed legislation the provision that women who are pregnant with non-viable foetal anomalies have access to the choice of legal abortion in the Republic.
We request that the Joint Committee on Health and Children invite representatives of Terminations For Medical Reasons and Deirdre Conroy (D v Ireland) to make a presentation to the committee as soon as is possible.
Such women should not be forced to travel outside Ireland for a termination. Women’s voices and experiences are entirely absent from the current abortion debate. We hope that the joint committee will redress this imbalance as a matter of urgency. – Yours, etc,
Dr MARY FAVIER,
Dr MARK MURPHY &
Dr PEADAR O’GRADY Doctors for Choice Ireland; CLAIRE FOGARTY, Nurses and Midwives for Choice Ireland; AMELIA REID & ROBERT OBARA, Medical Students for Choice Ireland; JANE FISHER, Director, Ante-natal Results and Choices London; Dr CLARE GERADA, Chairman, Royal College of General Practitioners; Dr WENDY CHAVKIN, Global Doctors For Choice, New York; MARGE BERER, Editor, Reproductive Health Matters London; Prof VERONICA O’KEANE, Trinity College Dublin; Prof WENDY SAVAGE, Doctors for a Woman’s Choice on Abortion, London; JOYCE ARTHUR, Executive Director, Abortion Rights Coalition Canada; CASEY BURCHELL, Committee Member, Reproductive Choice Australia; LESLIE CANNOLD, President, ProChoice Victoria; JENNY EJLAK, President, ProChoice Tasmania; CAIT CALCUTT & KATE MARSH, Children by Choice, Australia; Dr MORGAN HEALY & ALISON McCULLOCH, Abortion Law Reform Association New Zealand,
C/o Parnell Square East, Dublin 1.
Sir, – There is grave concern among doctors across the specialties about the proposed legislation for termination of pregnancy in the case of threatened suicide on the part of the mother.
Many of us have practised in jurisdictions where such legislation was the first step towards what has become abortion on demand. Attempts to revisit legislation and reduce the number of abortions by restricting the grounds on which termination of pregnancy may be performed, such as gestational age, have been fraught and largely fruitless. Those who think there will be a second chance, whether by so-called sunset clause or otherwise, are naive.

Sir, – Luke Cahill (May 28th) asks if we will be “apologising to the Syrian people in 100 years’ time” for not supporting further “militarising the conflict”. If Mr Cahill was keeping up with the “collateral” consequences of our support for such militarist enterprises on the imploding Iraq and Afghanistan, he might be less monocular in his martial enthusiasms (“Dozens dead in Baghdad bombings”, World News, May 27th). – Yours, etc,
DAMIEN FLINTER,
Castleview Estate,

Sir, – Joe Humphreys (Stories from the Revolution 1912-1923, supplement, May 22nd) has done your readers a disservice by misrepresenting the historical record regarding the redemption of Republican bonds and the assignment of some of these bonds to my grandfather for investment in the Irish Press. The facts are as follows.
The eventual redemption of these bonds had been accepted by Cumann na nGaedheal when in government. In 1933 when the redemption came before the Dáil, Desmond Fitzgerald TD moved an amendment aimed at denying assignees the benefit of redemption. In the course of the debate he quoted from a circular dated February 1930 from Frank P Walsh on behalf of the Irish Press fund- raising committee: “Whilst these funds are being solicited by way of donations, Mr de Valera will, of course, not derive personally any monetary profit from them. He intends to make the necessary and proper arrangements to ensure that if any profits accrue from the enterprise, or, if there should be any distribution of assets, such profits and the amount of any such distribution will be made available for the donors, according to their respective donations.” In reply my grandfather confirmed that appropriate arrangements had been made.
On January 14th, 1959, Noel Browne TD made certain unfounded allegations regarding Irish Press shares when he closed a debate on his motion of censure arising from the fact that my grandfather continued as controlling director of Irish Press Limited while holding the office of taoiseach. He had not made these allegations earlier in the debate, thereby ensuring that my grandfather would have no opportunity to reply in the debate. That night my grandfather wrote to the morning newspapers as follows:
“Sir – At a late hour tonight, when there was no opportunity of replying in the Dáil, Dr Browne made a series of personal charges against me which time permits me to deal with only in brief. I have not and never had any beneficial interest in shares in Irish Press Ltd, other than a few hundred personal shares. The block of ninety odd thousand shares to which Dr Browne has referred is held by me and my son, Vivion de Valera, on behalf of the persons who subscribed the money and to whom any dividends or other profits on these shares must be paid. Financial benefit or profit, either as to capital or dividend, has not accrued and cannot possibly at any time accrue to me or any of my family in respect of those shares. They are held, as I have publicly stated, to ensure that the purposes for which the money was subscribed will not be departed from. We hold no other block of shares as Dr Browne suggests. Dr Browne’s allegation that we have been engaged in a process of acquiring shares at reduced rates or that we have so built up a large holding of shares is completely untrue. Yours faithfully, Eamon de Valera.”
Contrary to what Joe Humphreys states, my grandfather did not “keep his huge family shareholding secret” as there was no shareholding to keep secret about!
All the above is part of the public record, as is my grandfather’s shareholding in Irish Press Ltd. I can confirm that Dr Browne’s allegations regarding Irish Press Ltd shares were untrue and an invention on his part. Dr Browne had inspected the Irish Press register of members but there is nothing in the register to support his allegations. I can also add that the “ninety odd thousand shares” referred to by my grandfather represents the entire fundraising in America and including the proceeds from the assigned bonds. – Yours, etc,
EAMON de VALERA,

Sir, – I refer to Catriona Crowe’s identification of the Representation of People Act 1918 as a significant step on the way to full enfranchisement for women albeit conditioned by head of household status and being over 30 years of age (Opinion, May 25th). The first step on this road had been taken a generation earlier when the Local Government (Ireland) Act 1898 had extended voting rights to women – an outcome prompted by the lobbying of the indefatigable Anna Haslam and other suffragists, female and male. The ensuing local government elections of 1899 represented the first occasion on which women were entitled to participation in an island-wide democratic franchise, almost 20 years before voting rights for parliamentary elections were granted. – Yours, etc,
LIAM KENNY,
Broadfield,

Sir, – President Obama has defended his country’s drone attacks as a “legal, effective and a necessary tool in an evolving US counterterrorism policy” (World News, May 24th).
According to the Bureau of Investigative Journalism, President Obama approved 300 drone strikes in Pakistan alone between 2009 and 2012 that killed 2,152, including 290 civilians, 64 of whom were children. This is a higher death toll than the Bush administration in the period 2004 to 2009 which launched 52 strikes, killing 438, including 182 civilians, 112 of whom were children.
This comparison bears close scrutiny for those – including the Nobel Foundation in Stockholm and those who flocked to greet the President in College Green, Dublin in May 2011 – who feel that Obama represents a turn to a more enlightened page in US history.
Is it too much to expect of a celebrated Nobel Peace Laureate, that he abandon the heinous use of drones for whom innocent civilians are paying such a heavy price? – Yours, etc,
STEPHEN MCCLOSKEY,

Irish Independent:

* Over the past week, we have been treated to various dissertations on the use of discretion by gardai on the penalty points issue. As the original chief superintendent responsible for the Garda National Traffic Policy Bureau, I feel much of the commentary has been misleading and inaccurate.
Also in this section
Pope’s message gives hope for us all
We need public transport
TD resign? You must be joking
* Over the past week, we have been treated to various dissertations on the use of discretion by gardai on the penalty points issue. As the original chief superintendent responsible for the Garda National Traffic Policy Bureau, I feel much of the commentary has been misleading and inaccurate.
To digress for a moment, the road safety actions of An Garda Siochana have been an overwhelming success evidenced by a progressive decrease in road deaths and injuries over the past decade.
This success is predicated on a systems approach to enforcement which is characterised by robust enforcement of speeding, drink driving and seat-belt wearing. The speeding detection system is largely an automatic process with detections being electronically made by GATSO or the civilian contractor.
This approach is the Australian model that I researched and recommended in 1997. It is based on a simple premise, which is that we will alter our driving behaviour only when the sanctions are immediate, relevant and fair.
It is supported by a strong IT system with seamless connection to the courts and the Road Safety Authority (RSA).
I carried out an examination of this system for the Garda Ombudsman in 2008 and many of the current issues were highlighted in that report but remained shelved. Specifically, issues of discretion were examined.
The idea that 13,000 gardai can somehow operate individual discretion is not tenable. An Garda Siochana has formulated a prescriptive policy. It is contained in the Fixed Charge Processing System (FCPS) manual. It should be updated and stress-tested to meet current fairness requirements.
There is a long history of the notion of the exercise of discretion by individual garda officers, but increasingly this facility is incorporated into policy directives and defined prosecution strategies.
Ultimately, garda officers must know that policing is something they do for people, not to people – it is a noble service.
The current political debate is disturbing and there is danger that public confidence will be shaken in the garda enforcement policy. This should not be permitted to happen as much has been achieved in preserving life.
In conclusion, though, let’s dispense with the current fig-leaf of “discretion” in the context of the penalty points debate.
John O’Brien
Balbriggan, Co Dublin
A PROPER PRIVILEGE
* I was disturbed to read Transport Minister Leo Varadkar’s words over the weekend to the effect that the constitutional protection for TDs and senators travelling to and from Leinster House is “outdated and redundant”.
It is my view that too many in the current generation of governing politicians have no appreciation for history, or the wider reasons why such allegedly “outdated” practices are in place.
The “privilege” (although it shouldn’t really be described as such, as it is more of a safety mechanism for democracy) which Mr Varadkar seeks to attack is in place so that, for example, no Taoiseach or Justice Minister could order the gardai to prevent a member of the Oireachtas (an opposition member, for example) from attending a vote in the Oireachtas.
If it were possible for the Government to act in such a way, we would be on a short road to an autocratic state.
This is why the travelling privilege is in place, so that no TD or senator can be prevented from casting their vote in the Oireachtas by an arm of the State.
John B Reid
Monkstown, Co Dublin
NOT A PRO-LIFE BILL
* As one involved in campaigning on right-to-life issues for more than 30 years, I am appalled at the stance of many parties and individuals in Leinster House on the Protection of Life During Pregnancy Bill. Some even go so far as to call it a pro-life bill.
If they understand the significance of the bill and are honest in expressing their opinions, they would certainly not say that. There is a good reason why all governments since 1992 decided not to legislate for suicidality in the flawed X Case judgment, because if enacted into law it can, in time, lead to wide-ranging abortion.
This bill allows a perfectly healthy baby, in the womb of a physically healthy mother, to be aborted in circumstances where there is no reliable scientific or moral justification for so doing. Pro-abortion elements in Leinster House are delighted, seeing such a law as capable of further development along the lines they wish.
The people in 1983 voted overwhelmingly for an equal right to life of mother and unborn baby. The politicians are subverting this and even hope to get it passed without a vote! Is there any sense of democratic accountability left?
Des Hanafin
Honorary president, Pro-life Campaign
Dublin Road, Thurles, Co Tipperary
DON’T IMPOSE BELIEFS
* There is some truth in the narrative that you cannot have separation of church and state without separating your personal religious opinion from your duties as an Irish citizen.
We continually reprimand the Muslim world for confusing politics with religion, bringing often corrupted versions of Sharia law to bear on residents of their countries.
You have a right to be a conscientious objector, to not participate in something you do not believe in. You do not have the right to impose your belief system on another human being.
The debate on abortion and the future difficult debates on end-of-life care should be about what we as a society feel is best for our citizens, rather than some personal fear of hell.
There is a place for both the Catholic religion and a modern state in Ireland. It is a line many of our citizens walk easily each day.
Pauline Bleach
Wolli Creek, NSW, Australia
CLIMATE CHANGE
* After reading the article about the current cold snap (May 25), I think many people could be forgiven for being a bit confused about the nature of global warming.
In particular, Prof John Sweeney is quoted in an article in the Irish Independent from November 2, 2010 claiming that we can all look forward to a 2C rise in temperatures and a boost in cereal yields due to all the extra carbon dioxide floating about. And yet here we are scarcely three years later, looking at an average 2C drop in temperatures, with farmers struggling to grow anything.
I think we all would have more respect for climate scientists if they would just come out and admit that blaming everything on a harmless trace gas like CO2 was actually a huge mistake.
Just give us our carbon taxes back and we’ll say no more about it.
Dr Alan Rogers
Castleknock, Dublin 15
TAXING TIMES
* I paid the residential property tax online this morning and was amazed to see the way Revenue frames its bill: it calls the tax “the amount you would like to pay”.
I want to assure the Government that the amount of property tax I would like to pay is €0 and I will be making my feelings clear on the matter come the next election.
Jack Downey
Old Cratloe Road, Limerick
Irish Independent


Wet

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Wet 29th May 2013

I trot round the park today and listen to the Navy lark. I Oh dear, oh dear
Lady Todd Hunter Brown thought she had seen a ghost ship and Troutbridge is sent off to investigate. But its Nunky’s tug. She has been painted with luminous paint by a gang of rival smugglers. Priceless.
A quiet day off out to the postbox very tired under the weather, its raining so no gardening
We watch Passportto Plimico a wonderful old film as just as true today
I win at Scrabble today, just and gets just under 400, Mary might get her revenge tomorrow, I hope.

Obituary:

For 18 years as Labour MP for Provan and then for Baillieston, Wray championed struggling Glasgow communities. With violent crime endemic, he pushed through a Bill in 1997 to curb the sale of knives, winning all-party support; he also stood firm against drugs.
Wray was the antithesis of New Labour. Firmly to the Left, he opposed abortion, was sceptical over Europe and was proud to call himself a “Fenian”.
Having started delivering coal by horse and cart in the slums of the Gorbals, Wray arrived in the Commons in 1987 a wealthy man. On the way he had been a street trader, lorry driver and scrap metal dealer before branching into property.
Wray’s generosity to the needy was matched by an unnerving determination never to be crossed. Constituents who complained to him of being exploited would be told: “Don’t worry. I’ll get him.”
His physical presence — and the respect in which he was held — owed much to youthful success in the ring. Wray believed fervently in the ability of boxing to keep young lads out of trouble, and as president of the Scottish Ex-Boxers’ Association promoted the sport to the full.
When calls for boxing to be banned in Britain reached their height, he organised a lunch for the press with the likes of Frank Bruno, Frank Warren and Prince Naseem.
Wray’s most passionate and long-running campaign was against fluoridation, which he scorned as unnecessary, and possibly harmful, mass medication. As a councillor, Wray took up the case of Catherine McColl, a grandmother who went to court challenging Strathclyde region’s right to add fluoride to the water supply.
Despite having no legal training, Wray argued — in what became the longest hearing in Scottish legal history — that fluoridation violated two Acts of Parliament. Lord Jauncey’s ruling, handed down in 1983, found for Mrs McColl.
In the Commons, Wray harried governments which tried to prevent local councils from blocking fluoridation. He insisted that there was no firm evidence that fluoride protected children’s teeth, poverty being the main cause of dental decay.
James Aloysius Joseph Patrick Gabriel Wray was born in the Gorbals on April 28 1935 (he claimed 1938), one of eight children of a poor family of Irish origin, and was educated at elementary school.
He built a following in the community organising rent strikes, and in 1964 was elected to the city council. He became a Strathclyde councillor in 1976.
As agent to the Gorbals’ MP Frank McElhone, Wray was renowned for his ability to conjure up workers and cars on polling day. He hoped to succeed McElhone, but when the MP died in 1982 his widow took the seat.
Instead Wray went for Provan, where Hugh Brown was retiring. The Trotskyist Militant Tendency believed that they had the seat sewn up, but Wray got to work and pipped their candidate by one vote. His election in 1987 — and for Baillieston from 1997 — became a formality.
Despite his Euroscepticism, Wray was appointed a delegate to the Council of Europe. Unwilling to fly, he travelled to Strasbourg by car, ferry and train.
As a sideline, Wray kept his parliamentary colleagues supplied with watches and jewellery. Forced by a stroke to give up his seat in 2005, he spent his retirement making jewellery.
Jimmy Wray’s first two marriages ended in divorce. In 1999 he married, thirdly, Laura Walker, a solicitor; they separated in 2010. He is survived by a son and two daughters of his first marriage, and a son of his third.
Jimmy Wray, born April 28 1935, died May 25 2013

Guardian

As a London GP for 30 years I have, like Dr John Davies (Letters, 27 May), served my time in the old model of out-of-hours care, working all day, most of the night, and all the next day.
I take issue with his suggestion that this model perished due to an increasing proportion of women in the GP workforce; it perished because it was unequal to the rising demand for care. In south-east London, our out-of-hours care has been provided since 1996 by a co-operative of local GPs, most of whom have not exercised their right to opt out.
Yet our local accident and emergency departments are seeing the same explosion in attendance as others across the country – giving the lie to Jeremy Hunt’s argument that the increase is due to inadequate GP out-of-hours provision. GPs and A&E departments are experiencing increasing demand for care, and we must work together to address the factors responsible for this, not engage in sniping and scapegoating.
Dr Martin Edwards
London

There is no way that the entire badger population in the two pilot cull zones will be destroyed (Culls risk illegally exterminating badgers, animal expert warns, 27 May). Safeguards have been put in place to ensure this does not happen. The culls will not take place over 100% of the cull zones and will be carried out under licence by trained professionals to ensure they are safe, effective and humane. These safeguards are based on the most up-to-date science and badger population estimates.
No farmer wants to see the wholesale destruction of the badger population. Culls will only ever be carried out in areas where tuberculosis is endemic and will never be carried out nationwide. What the thousands of farmers living with the threat of bovine TB hanging over their businesses want to see is action now to curb the spread of this disease. This can only be achieved through a comprehensive suite of measures designed to tackle TB on all fronts, including in wildlife.
Tom Hind
Director of corporate affairs, National Farmers’ Union
• I cannot understand why reports on the findings of the independent scientific group on cattle TB concentrate on only one of its two key conclusions – that badger culling could make no meaningful contribution to control of TB in cattle.  
Sir John Bourne, in his covering letter to the secretary of state in June 2007, stated: “Scientific findings indicate that the rising incidence of disease can be reversed, and geographical spread contained, by the rigid application of cattle-based control measures alone… Our report provides advice on the need for Defra to develop disease-control strategies, based on scientific findings. Implementation of such strategies will require Defra to institute more effective operational structures, and the farming and veterinary communities to accept the scientific findings.”
Judging from Bourne’s recent remarks, it would appear that neither the previous Labour administration nor the current coalition has acted upon his committee’s advice and that the farming community has not accepted the established science.
Ivor Annetts
Tiverton, Devon
• George Monbiot (My manifesto for rewilding the world, 28 May) presents a delightful idea, except for the fact that Britain is a densely populated country – we have difficulty co-existing with badgers! Before we think of reintroducing mesofauna, let’s try to keep what we already have.
The Essex Wildlife Trust is trying to hang on to our minimal population of dormice by managing their habitat. Many other trusts are working in the same way with other species. Much of the damage to our ecosystems is due to the introduction of foreign mesofauna – sika deer for example – and even native deer have so increased in numbers that they need culling, having no natural predators. Reintroduce the wolf to control them? Have you any idea of the range needed for a wolf pack?
Val Spouge
Braintree, Essex
• I read Chris Packham’s article (Britain’s paradise has been lost, 25 May) with interest. The fact that Natural England is about to allow the destruction of buzzards and their nests is outrageous. The war against protected raptors continues unabated. The fact that much of this activity is illegal is no deterrent. Unfortunately, none of the main parties shows much interest in the natural world. They would if their seats were threatened.
Gordon Woodroffe
York
• Sad to read that Natural England has granted a licence to destroy buzzard nests and eggs to protect pheasants. I’ve walked the woods around here for many years and seen countless buzzards and far too many pheasants but I’ve never seen a buzzard take a pheasant. I would prefer them to grant a licence to destroy the halfwits who present the greatest threat to pheasants. The winter months are ruined around here by the sound of incessant shooting.
Rod White
Uley, Gloucestershire
• The State of Nature report Chris Packham refers to is a catalogue of despair for our wildlife, highlighting how butterflies have declined by 72% in the last 10 years for example. However, the future is even more uncertain for our enigmatic glowworms, a beetle of warm summer evenings, which recent research from Essex suggests is declining faster than our butterflies – with a 74% reduction in numbers between 2001 and 2010.
It is hard to be optimistic, but there are things that can be done to bring our wildlife back. For glowworms, active habitat management could slow down the decline and possibly reverse it in the long term.
Coppicing of ancient woodland is one such conservation practice that could help our glowworms survive for future generations to enjoy. What a real tragedy it would be if the naturalists of the future couldn’t see these green pin pricks of light, which have inspired poets through the centuries. We need more people out and about finding where glowworms are in the countryside, particularly as many people have never seen one.
Finding them for the first time is one of nature’s special treats. I urge people to visit the UK glowworm website (www.glowworms.org.uk) to get involved with the search for glowworms.
Dr Tim Gardiner
Manningtree, Essex
• Amid the many reasons given for the decline in our wildlife, Chris Packham does not mention predation by cats. A survey by the Mammal Society revealed a horrifying hit list. Extrapolating from this, the estimated 9 million cat population kills over 20 million birds, 5 million frogs and countless slowworms, lizards and snakes. It would help if cat owners kept their cats in during daylight hours and fitted them with electronic collar tags.
John Butter
Barnstaple, Devon

In his article on austerity, Larry Elliott (Even the lab rats know Osborne experiment has failed, 27 May) is sceptical of the notion that “higher borrowing today means higher taxes tomorrow” and economic agents react accordingly by saving. While this doctrine – Ricardian equivalence (RE) – may not necessarily hit the nail on the head, it does not necessarily follow that there is nothing in it.
In my view, where an economy is running a budget deficit which is below its capacity to grow its way out of, there probably is scope for fiscal activism to kickstart it. Unfortunately, this almost certainly is not true of the UK. We ran a budget deficit at the top of a boom when we should have been running a surplus. While I count myself at the more optimistic end of estimates of how much capacity was lost in the recession, it may be brave to assert RE does not apply at all to the situation we find ourselves in.
Paul Negrotti
Greenford, Middlesex
• Larry Elliott takes a much-needed swipe at the austerity brigade who seek to spin what was a crisis of private debt into one of public debt. The first two quarters of election year 2010 saw GDP growth of 0.6% and 0.7% respectively, and in addition saw the bond markets quite happily oversubscribing on auctions of gilts (government debt) in the short term and the long term – generally a sign that they believe the economy has turned the corner. And this in the months before any cuts were mooted and before the complexion of the next parliament was known.
As news of George Osborne’s unprecedentedly draconian cuts sunk in during the autumn of that year, the final (Christmas) quarter saw the GDP index plunge back through zero and into 0.4% negative. Will this go down as a spectacular example of a chancellor grabbing defeat from the jaws of victory, or perhaps of a Labour leadership still on the back foot and losing the propaganda war?
David Redshaw
Gravesend, Kent

Having read Archbishop Desmond Tutu et al’s plea for boycotting Israel (Letters, 28 May), I found myself shifting uncomfortably in my seat. Isn’t Tutu the person who, a few years ago, encouraged an idea to bring an international football tournament to South Africa, and is now calling for a boycott of the idea to bring an international football tournament to Israel? Does football discriminate between nations, being a sport that “might work towards binding people together” in South Africa but not in Israel? Isn’t Tutu also the person who, 36 years ago, fought ferociously against a racist regime persecuting blacks in South Africa, the same one who, just over 20 years ago, preached for forgiveness for a racist regime which persecuted Jews in Nazi Germany?
The best answer to Tutu’s divisiveness can be found on the field, in the Israeli under-21 national team – half of the team are Israeli Arabs and the other half Israeli Jews: young people bringing real hope to the region.
Amir Ofek
Press attache, Israeli embassy, London
• The letter writers’ call for Uefa to join an anti-Israel academic and cultural boycott, far from fighting racism, would exemplify it. Tellingly, the letter writers hail the recent example of Stephen Hawking announcing his refusal to attend a conference hosted by long-time peace advocate Shimon Peres in Israel. Of course, if Mr Hawking refuses to travel to Israel or meet with leading theoretical astrophysicists like Avi Loeb and Jacob Bekenstein solely because they are Israelis, it may impede the progress of science, but it will not promote peace. Moreover, if there is any national entity whose sports teams should be subjected to a boycott, it is the Palestinians. They have never apologised for their massacre of 11 Israeli athletes and coaches at the 1972 summer Olympics, and last year, the Palestinian Authority coldly opposed even a proposed moment of silence during the opening ceremonies in London in memory of the Israeli victims of Palestinian terror.
Moreover, just this May, Palestinian Olympic committee president Jibril Rajoub declared: “I swear that if we had a nuke, we’d have used it this very morning”, which in my view was a threat against Israel. Surely Palestinian terrorism and apparent threats of nuclear genocide by Palestinian Authority officials deserve at least as strong a condemnation as Jews building homes in their ancestral homeland.
Stephen A Silver
San Francisco, California, USA
• Firstly, the reason Israel plays in European football tournaments is that, long before the 1967 war and the subsequent “occupation”, Arab and some Asian countries refused to play Israel at any level. Secondly, if countries were stopped from hosting tournaments because of their human rights records, we’d probably have to hold the World Cup etc in Luxembourg every four years!
Lastly, the games played in Israel will be played in front of crowds unhindered by restrictions on race or gender, unlike the United Nations-sponsored Gaza marathon, which was cancelled due to the fact women were banned from running with men. The World Cup after next is in Russia which, last weekend, saw the arrest of dozens of gay rights activists in Moscow. I don’t see any “show Russia the red card” protests.
Simon Lyons
London

Your piece (May’s plans to challenge extremism face backlash, 28 May), rightly pointed out that Ofcom enforces rules designed to protect audiences from harm from religious extremism broadcast on TV and radio. However, it omitted an important point: the broadcasters’ role in protecting viewers. They must make careful editorial judgements, balancing freedom of expression with care for their audiences.
Tony Close
Director of standards, Ofcom
• I wish the media would stop using the term “radicalised” to mean “lured into terrorism”. “Radical” used to have a respectable political meaning – seeking a fundamental reorganisation of society so as to end privilege and inequity. Now apparently it refers to religious zealots who try to behead soldiers. In what conceivable way can this be “radical”? “Brutalised” is surely a more accurate term.
Nick Rogers
Belfast
• HMRC (Letters, 28 May): Help multinationals retain cash.
Alasdair McKee
Lancaster
• Bill Pertwee (Obituary, 28 May) was much more than just a member of the Dad’s Army company. He was the star of the 70s stage production derived from the TV series when, playing the part of Max Miller, he brought the show to life after the interval with the recreation of a wartime music hall. In contrast to his Hodges character, he lit up the theatre.
Michael Whelle
Wyke Regis, Dorset
• Why stop at fixing a ladder at the Hillary Step (Report, 27 May)? When the Goons climbed Mount Everest (in The Internal Mountain), they installed a lift to become the “the first men to go up Everest from the inside”.
David Nowell
New Barnet, Hertfordshire
• And why are large sums of money (except, of course, the price of a Guardian) always “eye-watering” (Letters, 28 May)?
Richard McClean
Marple Bridge, Greater Manchester
• Nothing is free any more. It’s always absolutely free.
Graham Guest
Beckenham, Kent

Independent

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Without giving the issue any debate the National Farmers Union has gathered the farming community under its wing and led it to slaughter. The badgers must pay the price for cattle, as raptors have paid the price for pheasants.
Badgers have been blamed for the loss of songbirds, hedgehogs, honeybees, as well as the rise of TB in cattle. Badgers aren’t responsible. Neither are they responsible for hedgehog decline – earthworms and grubs are their staple diet . Intensive farming lies at the root. But the cull beginning on 1 June will be thorough and an indigenous species, here with the Celts, will become little more than vermin. 
Whatever is said by those in power, this cannot be humane: there is a very small target area on a badger where the shot is likely to be quickly fatal: it will be extremely difficult, and those who consider them vermin aren’t likely to attempt that kind of accuracy with commitment.
Illegal badger-baiting will presumably step up apace, using the cull as a smokescreen.
If too many problems become known, Owen Paterson has said they will consider non-cyanide gassing instead. Setts will be filled in once (hopefully) empty. There is no intention of keeping any badgers on the land.  
Developers dislike badgers too; sett surveys, consultations and limited licensing periods greatly restrict timetables and are (possibly) the last barrier to building on green-belt land.If protections are lifted, as Mr Paterson has suggested, there wouldn’t be a problem.
This cull is very likely to eradicate badgers from many areas of England – and we will, of course, still have bovine TB.
Wendy Rayner, Warminster, Wiltshire
Render unto Caesar the taxes you can’t avoid
Whether there can be a moral dimension to company taxation is debatable. The Gospels quote the response by Jesus to questioners: “Render unto Caesar the things that are Caesar’s and unto God the things that are God’s”. Only the latter involves a code of ethics. The former is a matter of not falling foul of Caesar’s laws. Company managers may make generous provisions for their employees and shareholders, but the company itself has no ethical dimension other than abiding by the law.
Since companies recoup the cost of taxation through the prices charged to customers for their goods and services, it can be argued that company taxation is pointless. Abolishing it would remove every reason for endless legal wrangles and the need for thousands of corporate accountants and HMRC inspectors.
In the real world, however, governments will reap what they think they can get away with from taxpayers in the form of VAT, income and capital taxes, customs and excise duties. Companies will continue to provide a convenient and cheap short-cut to stealth-taxing customers, even though international experience has shown that company tax rarely produces more than one tenth of revenues. 
Has it occurred to our moralising politicians that a clearly administered, low company tax system will ultimately yield predictable, and possibly larger, income tax revenues from distributed dividends, corporate wages and salaries, as well as lower prices, than would result from a complex, high-rate company tax system supplemented by sudden “ethical” tax demands promoted by publicity-seeking MPs and pressure groups?
Caroline Doggart, London SW3
 It is hardly surprising that corporation tax gets “avoided” since it depends on a computation of “profits”, which is an entirely hypothetical concept, especially in the case of a multi-national, multi-layered group with lots of inter-company transactions.
But a tax on sales output, such as VAT, is almost impossible legally to avoid. And what difference does it make to the consumer whether their supplier pays tax in the form of VAT or as corporation tax? In both cases the paying company is free to fix its end-prices according to what the market will pay. The best answer is to abolish corporation tax, which does not raise mega-billions in any case, and recover the shortfall by increasing VAT.
Whether an ice-cream retailer pays a certain amount of tax as corporation tax, or as VAT, will not in any way influence the tax-inclusive price she charges for the ice-creams she sells. Hauling her up before a House of Commons Committee and bawling at her is about the least effective way of achieving anything.
Chris Sexton, Crowthorne, Berkshire
A plot to build your own house
I wholeheartedly agree with Graham Currie (letter, 17 May) that a rethink is needed over land for house-building. When the Government announced that it was putting money into new houses it was only through commercial housing developers, who would need to make a return for their shareholders.
The way forward is for small tracts of land to be bought by local authorities (enabling brownfield sites to be utilised, thus saving green belt intrusion) and for basic infrastructure (roads, drainage, open areas) to be set in place.
When the land is then divided into various-sized plots, these could be sold on to individuals to cover the costs of the council’s initial investment. The new owners could then self-build their own houses, within a framework of locally agreed design parameters.
The result should be a pleasant variety of houses at affordable (market) prices, rather than large estates of similar houses (usually of limited design merit) sold for commercial gain.
There is a successful example of such a development here in Bristol (although not council-initiated) and I understand Holland also has a successful track record in such developments.
Joel Baillie-Lane, Bristol
Dialogue of the deaf with Israel
Ben Marshall (letter, 21 May) urges academics not to join the Israel boycott campaign, but to support dialogue with their Israeli counterparts.
This is exactly what a succession of politicians have been saying regarding the Israeli-Palestinian problem and Israel’s illegal building of settlements for the past 30-odd years. In that time, Israel has taken no notice of countless UN resolutions ordering them to withdraw from the occupied territories and cease building illegal settlements. Even while they were at Camp David supposedly discussing peace the building continued with gusto, even though they had said they would stop.
It is not just time for an academic boycott of Israel, but high time our politicians seriously talked about international sanctions and a boycott. After 30 years of failed dialogue, and with Israel clearly having no intention of obeying international law, more serious measures are certainly needed to bring them into line.
Michael W Cook, Soulbury, Buckinghamshire
Apply to join  the Masons
John Walsh in his Notebook column (23 May) should note that it is “a terrible day for champions of reason” when journalists repeat myths as facts, for example: “That you can’t join the Masons as you can the Scientologists. You have to be asked”. This is untrue. 
You can apply to your local provincial office or the United Grand Lodge of England’s HQ, or through their websites, or ask anyone you know who might already be a member. In fact, they have always preferred that potential candidates are recruited from those who express an interest; they don’t want to “hard-sell” membership to you. 
They accept people from all backgrounds, but not people with criminal records; or atheists, so that’s Richard Dawkins out.
Chavez Pov, Wheathampstead, Hertfordshire
Tea and biscuits overcome hatred
After working my way through a thoroughly disheartening article, “Ten attacks on mosques since Woolwich murder” (28 May), my spirits were lifted by the last paragraph: 
“A lacklustre English Defence League march on a mosque in York on Sunday had been met by a show of solidarity from the local community. When only about seven EDL members turned up, they were approached by mosque members and four reportedly entered the mosque for tea and biscuits.”
Congratulations to the journalists Cahal Milmo and Nigel Morris for giving us something to restore our faith in human nature in the midst of extremely grim events.
Terry Mahoney, Chichester, West Sussex
Weekends in hospital
After hearing the report that the chance of fatal complications after planned surgery increases towards the end of the week, can anyone get the Health Secretary to explain why NHS hospitals differentiate between weekdays and the weekend at all?
Since our bodies and our health do not discriminate the day of the week, hospitals should operate the same way every day.
Laurence Williams, South Cockerington, Lincolnshire
Rights won’t cut the risk of rape
According to Owen Jones (27 May), “We have to challenge a culture that allows some men to think they can get away with rape.” Amen to that, but why is it heresy to suggest that women should take responsibility for behaviour which puts them at added risk?
An old saying comes to mind: “Only a fool walks the Green Line in Sarajevo believing that their right to life will save them from the sniper’s bullet.” That is not to condone the actions of the sniper, or the rapist. 
Philip Anthony, Brighton
Weeds on the line
Josh Cluderay (letter, 27 May) asks why councils don’t plant railway embankments with wild flowers to replace the miles of grass, nettles and “weeds” . There is no such plant as a weed. They are all unlucky wild flowers that have landed where it is inconvenient to humans.  Stop using the word “weed” and your wish has been fulfilled at no cost to anyone.
Nicky Fraser, Shrewsbury
Dave’s holiday
There’s no problem with a Prime Minister taking a short vacation, provided he has a reliable deputy to look after the shop. And provided he doesn’t have senior Cabinet members vying for position within the Tory party in an attempt to become his successor. While “call me Dave” should be concerned about what is happening in this country, the country should be worried about what is happening within this government!
Duncan Anderson, East Halton, Lincolnshire
Gender roles
If the word “actress” is to be deleted (letter, 28 May), then what happens to Best Actress awards?
David Keating, Lismore, Co Waterford,  Ireland

Times

‘Arguably Ed Hillary’s more impressive achievement was to improve the lives of Himalayan communities through a lifetime of service’
Sir, It was right to honour the 60th anniversary of mountaineering’s greatest feat, the ascent of Mount Everest by Sir Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay. Reading “Everest: fair play to a peculiarly British challenge” (May 29), however, you’d be forgiven for thinking it was solely a British feat. There is no mention of the fact that Ed Hillary was a New Zealander.
The article suggests it was a modern sense of sportsmanship which led to the expedition fudging that Hillary reached the summit before Norgay. In the same spirit, it’s important that Hillary’s New Zealand nationality is linked to this great feat. We’re a small country, it’s important to claim our national treasures.
Arguably Ed Hillary’s more impressive achievement was to improve the lives of Himalayan communities through a lifetime of service. This had nothing to do with his nationality and everything to do with his greatness.
Caleb Hulme-Moir
Sydney, Australia
Sir, Ben Macintyre says that attempts prior to 1953 were “each a chapter in the long and glorious narrative of heroic British failure”. This is unfair. Previous attempts brought new knowledge of routes, clothing, equipment and mountain leadership. This knowledge was bought at a cost of lives. It all increased by increments until brought together 60 years ago. The summit area was and still is known as the death zone.
I. H. Cairns
Perth
Sir, Smiths did beat Rolex to the summit of Everest in 1953 (report, May 27). Twenty-eight years after the conquest I was enjoying a quiet supper in Chengdu in China with Lord Hunt, leader of the successful ascent. As an amateur mountaineer, I was very keen to ask him who got to the top first. John told me that both Tenzing and Hillary shared the lead all the way up, but for what proved to be the final steps, Hillary just happened to be in the lead.
Now we are at the diamond jubilee celebration of their amazing ascent I thought it appropriate to relate John Hunt’s revelation, capped as it was by a sudden, loud, startled shout from John: “Tenzing!” At the very next table, unobserved by us, was sitting the famous Sherpa Tenzing, now professional guide for an American party on their way to Lhasha in Tibet. The joy of their meeting after so many years was a wonderful, profound moment for both of them, one which I remain deeply privileged to have shared.
Sir Kenneth Warren
Cranbrook, Kent
Sir, Mountaineering purists will be sorry to see fixed ladders on the Hillary Step (report, May 28). What would be hugely appreciated, however, is some form of shelter on the South Col. Here the sub-zero winds blow at force and never cease, and there are thousands of rocks lying about and simply inviting the idea of a wind wall or even of a shelter hut. Two or three Italian muratori would make short work of such a task if there were a means of mixing cement at low temperatures.
Roger D. Lascelles
London W14
Sir, A suitable way to celebrate the 60th anniversary might be to close the mountain to climbers for good, and ask the sponsors such as Rolex to clean up the mess left by recent climbers and provide pensions for the sherpas.
Jim Mann Taylor
Westbury-on-Severn, Glos

The citizens of Turkey are worried about the rise of Islamism, and even the top barristers in the country are not immune
Sir, Your warning to beware “Creeping Islamism” in Turkey (leading article, May 28) is timely.
At the close of an International Bar Association conference in Istanbul last month, the president of the Turkish Bar stunned the audience by informing us that he and nine other lawyers were facing criminal charges. Their crime? Making a public declaration in support of the right to a free trial. Their trial will take place in Istanbul on October 10.
To bring home the point, while I was being escorted round one of the local sights the next day, my Muslim tour guide fearfully whispered his concerns about the growth of Islamism and his worries for the future direction of his country.
We should all sit up and be concerned.
Simon Gallant
Gallant Maxwell, Solicitors, London W1

3

The rotten boroughs in the time of the Great Reform Bill of 1932 could be equated to the uneven constituency sizes today
Sir, As the great-great-great-grandson of Charles, 2nd Earl Grey, I have naturally warmed to Antonia Fraser’s excellent Perilous Question (review, May 4) detailing the drama of the Great Reform Bill 1832.
The rotten boroughs of that day remind us of the uneven size of constituencies today. I cannot believe that my Whig ancestor would approve of the Liberal Democrat leader of today vetoing measures to put that right.
It is high time that we had another Great Reform Bill.
Christopher Van Der Noot
Winchester

Scientists need to take care when submitting a paper for publication as there are some new journals who will charge a fee
Sir, Governments, rightly, are asking those who receive public funds for research to publish in open-access journals. One effect of this policy is the growth of publishers providing online journals that require no subscriptions from individuals to read the articles. Instead authors are asked to pay.
More competition in the field of science publishing is to be welcomed, but one regrettable side-effect is that researchers are being inundated with emails inviting them to submit papers to these new journals.
Of greater concern is that some of these new publications have adopted the name of a highly respected journal and simply made a minor modification to the title, such as a single letter or the inclusion of a hyphen. At best scientists discover that they have published in a journal that has a low scientific impact. At worst they may receive a substantial invoice in excess of the costs of publication.
Scientists and scientific societies do not have the funds to take legal action against these journals. They are also very concerned that they themselves may be the subjects of legal action if they suggest that such minor modifications to journal titles are a deliberate attempt to deceive. The best course of action is to make both funders and scientists aware of the problem and for scientists to take great care when submitting a paper.
Professor Cledwyn Thomas
Edinburgh

Suggestions for the source of Ronald Searle’s inspiration for St Trinian’s have produced a lively and varied postbag
Sir, My aunt, Hilda Sims, was principal at Acton Reynald School (letter, May 17), and so when The Oldie published an article in May 2003 about St Trinian’s I kept the cutting. The writer was Ann Murray. In 1950, when she was 12, Ronald Searle visited and is pictured sitting with schoolgirls and sketching Greek dancing.
David Sims
Chingford, Greater London

Telegraph:

SIR – British wildlife would be in a poorer state without the unique contribution of shooting. Land used for shooting acts as an oasis for wildlife, with two million hectares actively managed for conservation.
The Green Shoots programme of the British Association for Shooting and Conservation (BASC) supports, encourages and delivers landscape-scale conservation projects. So far it has generated almost 50,000 wildlife records. No one knew dormice still existed in Cheshire until we found them. Now shooting is helping them to spread and thrive by creating and maintaining wildlife corridors.
In the South West, BASC is working from the Somerset levels down to Dorset’s Jurassic Coast to trap mink, which can devastate our native wildlife. In North Wales our members, together with preservation groups, are controlling grey squirrels to provide better habitat for the native red. It’s clear that shooting provides landscape-scale conservation, which is part of the answer to habitat loss and wildlife decline.
Richard Ali
Chief Executive, BASC
Rossett, Denbighshire

SIR – I welcome your leading article (“Capital and country, Britain needs both” May 18), describing the relationship between the High Speed Rail 2 project and the economy. The cabinet of Core Cities (the eight largest city economies outside London), of which I am the member responsible for transport, met the Prime Minister in January to discuss how those cities, including Leeds, Manchester and Birmingham, can create more jobs and growth for Britain, particularly on the back of high-speed rail.
Research has shown that an over-reliance on the capital city is bad for national economies. England needs these eight core cities to succeed. If these cities performed at the national average, another £1.3 billion would be put into the economy every year. Unlocking growth relies on rebalancing the economy of Britain, which HS2 will help to do, bringing regeneration benefits outside the South East.
The Core Cities group conducted a study in 2011, and found that Britain ranks only 34th in the world for its infrastructure, and only spends 1.5 per cent of GDP on infrastructure. This is compared with 6 per cent in Japan and 3 per cent in France. This lack of infrastructure investment has an increasingly negative impact.
High-speed rail is not just about fast trains. Increasing capacity on the rail network is critical to our economic future. There is an important relationship between growth, jobs and HS2. High-speed rail is the best way to achieve a more sustainable economic future for the nation as a whole.
Sir Albert Bore
Leader, Birmingham City Council
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29 May 2013
SIR – I agree with the National Audit Office’s criticism of the business case for high speed rail (Business, May 16).
My train journey from Sheffield to London takes two hours and the service is half hourly. I find those two hours invaluable as they give me time to catch up on work. Without exception, I am not ready to put away my papers and laptop until a few minutes before arrival. The 20-minute time saving offered by HS2 would provide me with no benefit.
Distances between British cities are much smaller than in France, and a modest time saving is not of tangible benefit per se. The first TGV line in France between Paris and Lyon reduced the fastest journey times by 50 per cent from four hours to two. HS2 would never achieve anything approaching such a reduction.
Andrew Cook
Sheffield, South Yorkshire
SIR – HS2 is not so much London-centric (Letters, May 23) as EU-centric. It is but a part of the European Union’s grand projet, TEN-T, an integrated system of transport of all types intended to connect its major cities. While we remain in the EU this project will roll on in a preordained manner and any other alternatives, however sensible, are wishful thinking.
John P Kelly
Tipton St John, Devon
Royal Scotland
SIR – Allan Massie (Comment, May 27) believes that a breakaway Scottish state under SNP rule will maintain the monarchy indefinitely. This is a delusion.
Alex Salmond’s defence of the Crown is a mere show of tactics in order to keep the more conservative elements of Scottish opinion within the independence camp. A more radical successor to Mr Salmond will inevitably emerge; a Caledonian carbon-copy of the republican Australian premier, Paul Keating. Within a decade, a vote will be held on the future of the monarchy.
Stuart Millson
East Malling, Kent
Van ordinaire
SIR – Our local news reported that a cyclist was stopped by a policeman because he was riding a very expensive bike but not wearing correspondingly expensive cycle gear. What should I be wearing, as a Renault Kangoo owner, so that I don’t attract the attention of police officers?
Roger Crawshaw
Bristol
Strike legislation
SIR – The Government’s unwillingness to introduce tougher strike legislation for the London Underground (report, May 23) is deeply regrettable. In April, the Greater London Authority Conservatives released a report calling for Tube strikes to be banned and replaced with a system of binding arbitration. It proposed that a majority of eligible union members must vote in favour for a strike ballot to pass.
The current system provides an incentive for militant trade unions to strike at the drop of a hat. Polls have shown that a majority of the public believe striking is too easy. Boris Johnson, the Mayor of London, has strengthened his position on Tube strikes. It is time that both sides of the Coalition Government did the same.
Richard Tracey
Transport spokesman, GLA Conservatives
London SE1
Hunt the fusillo
SIR – Andrew H Molle (Letters, May 25) is hereby challenged to follow any of our D of E candidates from a trail of litter on their Bronze Expedition this weekend. He might be able to follow them from the sounds of young people enjoying themselves, and gearing up to the challenge of carrying everything they need for a weekend of camping and walking, but he will not find any litter. Even after we break camp, everyone falls in line for a campsite sweep, down to the last pasta twist.
Wayne H Burke
Duke of Edinburgh volunteer
Deeping St James, Lincolnshire
Restricting online porn
SIR – I don’t understand why any authority would want to acquaint five-year-olds with pornography (report, May 20). The problem is the ease by which a child can access porn on the internet – surely this is a matter of “closing doors”, not exposing children to adult material?
Joseph G Dawson
Preston, Lancashire
Isolation treatment
SIR – I had radioactivity treatment for thyroid cancer (report, May 28). The hospital had a lead-lined bed-sit where I spent a few days in isolation. When I left I was checked with a Geiger counter and had to wear a necklace warning that I was radioactive – “in case of a car-crash”, I was told, cheerfully.
Liz Wheeldon
Seaton, Devon
The place of scones in the history of cream teas
SIR – Your reference to cream teas being thought to date back to the 11th century (report, May 28) is way out. Tea was not known in this country at that time, though clotted cream was certainly produced on Tavistock Abbey farms centuries ago.
The use of scones is also a modern innovation, as is the mechanical cream separator, which dates from the 19th century.
Before that the cream was spread on small soft white bread rolls, variously referred to as “tuffs”, “halfpenny buns” or “splits”, depending on the district.
Often, though, the cream would simply be spread on slices of bread, and then, as on the tuffs, a spot of jam might be added as an enhancement.
Helen Harris
Tavistock, Devon
SIR – It was interesting to read that Dr Eugenia Cheng has spent so much time and effort on the vexing subject of the perfect cream tea. The Cornish, who invented the dish, do deploy the jam first for practical reasons (it is tidier to spread).
However, the scone is a recent innovation introduced by the Devonshirisation of the meal by lazy cafe owners and bakers in the Duchy.
Ron Harris
St Keverne, Cornwall
SIR – Cornish splits seem to have disappeared – is it because scones will keep for days and so are a more viable commercial entity? The cream tea has lost an essential component and, frankly, cream on top or beneath makes no odds.
Ann Morecraft
Kilmington, Devon

Irish Times:

   
Sir, – On the occasion of our most recent unannounced inspection by the HSE (the 10th in eight years) several battery-operated toys in one of our playrooms were found to have run flat. This contravened Regulation 25 ( Equipment and Materials ) Section (a) of the Child Care (Pre-School Services) ( No 2 ) Regulations 2006 and ensured we became part of the 75 per cent of childcare facilities in Ireland that don’t comply with current childcare legislation.
To suggest the HSE is failing in the standard of its inspections or that the majority of this country’s private childcare providers and their dedicated staff don’t treat children with care and understanding is not true.
As politicians of all parties jostle to demand tough action based on the evidence of a single, albeit excellent, television programme while conveniently ignoring advice and recommendations for many years from experts in the field, including childcarers, please let’s put things into perspective – and don’t throw the baby out with the bathwater. – Yours, etc,
KEN & MAIREAD
ANDREW,
Ringlee House Pre-School,

Sir, – You report that the referendum – to be held in September – will ask us to “either scrap or retain the Seanad” (Arthur Beesley, Front page, May 29th).
Is any consideration being given to the fact this will not simply be a vote on whether or not the senate is to disappear but also on whether or not large numbers of Irish graduates living abroad are to be disenfranchised?
For most of us in that position, our only voting right in Ireland is the right to elect a senator in one of the senate’s two academic sector electoral constituencies (the National University of Ireland and the University of Dublin). Are we then to have a vote in the referendum on the abolition of our voting rights? If not, how does Ireland plan to justify removing voting rights without the consent of those to be disenfranchised? – Yours, etc,
KATHLEEN FINGLETON,
Avenue Général de Gaulle,
Brussels,
Belgium.
A chara, – Why do we allow the cynical exploitation of the Seanad by political parties seeking electoral advantage in the Dáil to pass without comment?
A quick look at the websites for Fianna Fáil and Fine Gael shows that all incumbent senators of both parties have been assigned Dáil constituencies, such that a Fine Gael senator elected to the Seanad by the Labour Panel now represents constituents in Galway West, while the Fianna Fáil website proclaims another to be the “senator for Dublin North” (to pick but two examples). Although the Labour Party website does not assign constituencies to its senators, they appear free to make such a claim in their online biographies, and many do.
Under our Constitution, the two houses of the Oireachtas are supposed to perform distinct functions. To pretend that sitting senators somehow act as elected representatives for named Dáil constituencies that cannot vote for them is completely dishonest. This pretence not only subverts the constitutional distinction between the Seanad and Dáil, but also arguably demonstrates that a majority of senators either do not understand what their role is or are happy to disregard it, viewing their time in the upper house merely as a stepping stone to something better. – Is mise,
STEPHEN WILSON,
Kochannstraße,
Berlin,
Germany.

Sir, – There is a subliminal message in the CAP argument that rages at the moment. CAP is really to control and restrain agricultural production; it is what it was initiated for 40 years ago and must continue to do into the future and be replicated by other worldwide programmes to control and restrain all other forms of production. That is why the European Commission is so adamant about flattening out farm payments; they must under no circumstances encourage increased production. Agricultural production cannot be allowed to grow further as it already produces almost twice the amount of food needed to feed the human race.
Growth in economics is no longer needed or possible. But the economic philosophy we use to try and extricate society from this period of great economic insecurity and trauma is based on securing growth which has been a constant since the dawn of economic activity. There is no contingency plan to deal with the demise of growth and that is why the crisis gets constantly worse. The CAP was devised to control and restrict agricultural overproduction in Europe and has through quotas and payment to produce less or nothing at all achieved substantial success. The simple reality is that we no longer need or can sustain growth of production, as we are capable of and actively producing far too much already. – Yours, etc,
PADRAIC NEARY,
Tubbercurry, Co Sligo.

Sir, – As one involved in campaigning on right to life issues for more than 30 years, I am appalled at the stance of many parties and individuals in Leinster House on the Protection of Life During Pregnancy Bill. Some even go so far as to call it a pro-life Bill.
If they understand the significance of the Bill and are honest in expressing their opinions, they would certainly not say that. There is a good reason why all governments since 1992 decided not to legislate for suicidality in the flawed X case judgment, because, if enacted into law it can, in time, lead to wide-ranging abortion.
This Bill allows a perfectly healthy baby, in the womb of a physically healthy mother, to be aborted in circumstances where there is no reliable scientific or moral justification for so doing. Pro-abortion elements in Leinster House are delighted, seeing such a law as capable of further development along the lines they wish.
The people in 1983 voted overwhelmingly for an equal right to life of mother and unborn baby. The politicians are subverting this and even hope to get it passed without a vote! Is there any sense of democratic accountability left? – Yours, etc,
DES HANAFIN,
(Honorary President Pro-life Campaign),

Sir, – I wonder if the Government would consider changing the current property tax to a window tax, similar to that first levied in 1697 in Britain? Initially every house could be charged a basic fee. Then properties with 10-20 windows pay an additional amount and those with more than 20 paying the highest amount. This more equitable tax would be easy for the Government to enforce as tax inspectors could roam the country counting windows. It would take all the guesswork from homeowners trying to value their properties, hoping that an undervaluation won’t come back to haunt them in the future.
Tax evaders would have the opportunity to engage in the practice of “stopping up”, permanently filling in windows and the resulting deprivation of daylight would serve as a self-imposed penalty, thereby saving the Government millions in bringing tax defaulters to account. – Yours,etc,
MARIA HALPIN,
Clareville Road,

Irish Independent:

* The real tragedy in Flaubert’s ‘Madame Bovary’ was not the wife’s doomed extramarital affairs, but the insurmountable debt she found herself in.
Also in this section
Let’s dispense with the fig-leaf of discretion
Pope’s message gives hope for us all
We need public transport
* The real tragedy in Flaubert’s ‘Madame Bovary’ was not the wife’s doomed extramarital affairs, but the insurmountable debt she found herself in.
The arch-villain in this story is the devious draper who flattered and cajoled her into acquiring the fashion and style which her husband’s meagre salary could not cope with.
This is a common tale in today’s Ireland.
During the Celtic Tiger years many working couples were trapped into borrowing vast amounts of money by clever marketing by our national banks; now these couples are left in a state of despair similar to Emma and her husband.
The cuts in basic pay, new levies and various household charges brought in by the Government and the troika to stabilise the Irish economy have resulted in marriage break-ups and suicide caused by anxiety and stress to couples on fairly decent salaries.
This is a fact that is undisputable.
But where is the help for these couples? Who is going to lift their burden? Businesses get “haircuts” on debts, but are there no reliefs for PAYE workers whose tax is deducted at source?
The reader of ‘Madame Bovary’ is full of compassion for Emma, her husband and their neglected daughter at the end of this unhappy tale.
But one has to ask, where is that compassion for today’s couples, who find their relationships struggling under constant arguments over debt?
Where are we as a society if we leave “the middle-income family in mortgage arrears” without support while developers are bailed out and the media, along with politicians, drool over quashed penalty points?
The real tragedy in Irish society today is that no one seems to be listening to the cries from the over-burdened PAYE working couples with children who are not entitled to any state support and have to pay out for everything on a dwindling pay packet.
If we are serious about tackling suicide we must end patronising jargon and deal with this growing crisis.
Cllr Nuala Nolan (Labour)
Galway
ENOUGH ALREADY
* Surely we have had enough of the antics of James Reilly, Phil Hogan et al. Especially Al.
Gerry O’Donnell
Dublin 15
DOCTORS FOR CHOICE
* We believe that fatal foetal abnormalities should be included in the proposed Protection of Life During Pregnancy Bill 2013.
Dr Ruth Fletcher, of Keele University, in her submission to the Joint Committee on Health and Children, recommended that the unborn should be defined not to mean those foetuses which have lethal abnormalities and will not have a future independent life.
Every year, women with fatal foetal anomaly pregnancies face inhuman treatment by being forced to make the harrowing journey to the Foetal Medicine Unit in Liverpool, without compassion from the Irish State.
They travel at significant personal, financial and emotional cost, often in isolation, abandoned by the Irish health services. Such women require non-judgmental care in a familiar supportive environment, yet must face the tragic bureaucracy of having to arrange the return of their child’s remains to Ireland, if they choose.
The stigma of travelling abroad may be heightened by the current wording of the heads of the bill. This is because such Irish women will receive a medical treatment which is deemed a criminal offence if performed in the Republic of Ireland, with up to 14 years’ imprisonment as the sanction.
This month the Irish College of General Practitioners supported a motion at its AGM calling on the Government to include within the proposed legislation the provision that women who are pregnant and have non-viable foetal anomalies have access to the choice of legal abortion in the Republic of Ireland.
We write to request that the Joint Committee on Health and Children invite representatives of Terminations For Medical Reasons to make a presentation to the committee as soon as is possible.
Women should not be forced to travel outside Ireland for a termination. Women’s voices and experiences are entirely absent from the current abortion debate. We hope that the joint committee will redress this imbalance as a matter of urgency.
Dr Mary Favier
Dr Mark Murphy
Dr Peadar O’Grady
Doctors for Choice Ireland, Dublin 1
SEANAD IS AN AFFRONT
* It appears to be the same old clique fighting to keep the Seanad. In my opinion the Seanad is a well-paid club which facilitates a narrow group of well-connected people to pursue a cushy existence, while the rest of the world works for a living.
It is an affront to the suffering taxpayers in Ireland.
Harry Mulhern
Millbrook Road, Dublin 13
RUGBY TRIUMPHS
* “Once the soccer and rugby peter out, the thoughts of many of us veer towards the great games of Gaelic football and hurling” (editorial comment, May 27).
Peter out? Is that what happened on Saturday last when packed bars and many GAA clubs from Ballydehob to Ballymena tuned in to witness one of the greatest sporting events of the entire year? Yes, that heartstopping Pro12 final between Ulster and Leinster – by coincidence two of the top teams in the western hemisphere.
More than the year has turned for Irish rugby. It has begun to rival soccer as the most popular game in the country, whereas the triumphalist tone of your editorial bore all the hallmarks of a cry for help.
Niall Ginty
Killester, Dublin 5
SAME OLD POLITICS
* On Monday night Vincent Browne’s TV3 programme was dedicated to a discussion on the possibilities for a new political party. However, it was quite obvious that the producer of the programme didn’t hold out much hope for the idea because four of the five participants were the usual suspects, so it was very much the same old, same old.
It seemed that the participants felt that the concept of the small party started with the Progressive Democrats, but I can remember Chlann na Poblachta in the 1940s.
Both Fine Gael and Fianna Fail have been happy to ride out a period of power with the help of a minnow but are always ready and happy to devour them at the first opportunity.
We can remember Albert Reynolds’ hand grenade when, as a minister in a coalition, he described the relationship as “this temporary little arrangement”. Same old, same old!
When Enda Kenny walked into his new office two years ago, he removed Dev’s portrait and replace it with Mick. So as long as the Civil War lives on, it looks as though it will continue to be either of the big two in a temporary arrangement with some soon-to-be-forgotten third party.
RJ Hanly
Screen, Co Wexford
FINDING SPIRIT OF TRUTH
* If knowledge is power and power corrupts, isn’t it about time that the confessors confessed as to exactly what they did with all those admissions of child abuse that they were hearing? And is it also not time that we heard from those who confessed the confessors?
All this would be purely in the spirit of truth and reconciliation, of course, or does that only apply to lesser mortals?
Liam Power
Angel’s Court, San Pawl Il-Bahar, Malta
Irish Independent



Hospital

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Hospital 31 st May 2013

I trot round the park today and listen to the Navy lark. I Oh dear, oh dear
Troutbridge is taking the Todd Hunter Browns off again to some remote spot. The are a terribly nice couple but they only seem to last a couple of week in any diplomatic position and no one will say why. Priceless.
A quiet day off out to the hospital Mary is to have a test, not quite as bad as expected but what a morning.
We watch The Fast Lady dear Leslie Phillips a wonderful old film
Mary wins at Scrabble today, just and gets just over 400, I might get my revenge tomorrow, I hope.

Obituary:

Frederic Franklin
Frederic Franklin, who has died aged 98, was a Liverpool boy who rose to partner the starriest ballerinas of ballet’s golden age, outlived them all and – thanks to his exceptional memory – became a priceless historical link to the Ballets Russes period.

Frederic Franklin and Agnes de Mille in ‘Rodeo’ (1942), a ballet scored by Aaron Copland  Photo: HULTON/ GETTY
6:47PM BST 30 May 2013
Exuberant by nature, he was described by the American choreographer Agnes de Mille as “strong as a mustang, as sudden, as direct and as inexhaustible”. She cast him as the Champion Roper in her pioneering cowboy ballet Rodeo, and he was a favourite leading man too in creations of the 1940s by Léonide Massine and George Balanchine.
His remarkably eclectic career, performing with the Ballet Russe companies in America and Europe, gave him access to a very large repertory, which he remembered in astonishing detail. As a result he was a pivotal resource for biographers, stagers and historians of the ballet explosion of the early 20th century, particularly in America.
He was also a vivid raconteur of the early days of British dance. He recalled his first touring job, at the age of 18, on a northern England circuit: “We used to follow a comedian called Billy Bennett, who was billed ‘Almost A Gentleman’ and told lewd stories. I would stand in the wings, terrified. At the weekends the audience was always drunk. ‘Look at him!’ they’d shout. ‘Here, you’ve got your knickers on, mate!’ I’d be doing my big jetés around the stage — oh, terrified. We used to dread it. They’d never seen ballet before, let alone a man in tights… We were followed by a lady snake charmer.”
Thanks to his outstanding musicality, dramatic personality and athletic deftness, Franklin’s career rapidly improved; he would go on to become a favourite partner of the era’s greatest ballerinas, such as Alicia Markova and Alexandra Danilova.
Fred Franklin (he would rename himself Frederic) was born on June 13 1914 in Liverpool, the eldest of three children of Mabel and Fred Franklin, a refreshments caterer.
His imagination was fired when his parents bought a Victrola gramophone, and he asked to take dancing lessons, turning up to his first class aged six with a pair of girls’ pointe shoes. He found himself the only boy in his class at Shelagh Elliott-Clarke’s dance school — one of the first such institutions in the country — but disarmed potential bullies at his normal school by showing off medals won at dance competitions.
His mother took him to the Liverpool Empire to see Diaghilev’s Ballets Russes and Anna Pavlova, and at 17 he answered an advertisement in Variety that read: “Wanted: A Boy”. It turned out to be for a tap-dancing troupe, the Jackson Boys, hired for a Josephine Baker revue at the Casino de Paris .
Franklin had an uncanny ability to pick up steps. After showing himself an exceptional tap-dancer, he became a more than competent ballet dancer, able to perform with virtually no rehearsal. He was also a useful standby pianist, playing entirely by ear.
Having danced with Josephine Baker’s pet leopard, he moved back to England to dance with elephants and Peggy Ashcroft in a revue, The Golden Toy, at the London Coliseum. He got his longed-for ballet break when he was hired by Markova, Britain’s prodigious young star, as she launched her own touring company with Anton Dolin in 1935 . Franklin recalled: “I would say to her, ‘We’re the pioneers of ballet, like the early settlers. We’re the covered wagons.’”
In 1938 Massine signed him up for his Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo, and cast him in his hugely popular Gaîeté Parisienne as the romantic Baron who wins the favours of the flighty Glove-seller, played by Alexandra Danilova.
Massine also gave Franklin leading roles alongside Markova in his new Seventh Symphony (to Beethoven) and Le rouge et le noir (which had costumes by Henri Matisse); but it was for Franklin’s tap-dancing bravura that Agnes de Mille cast him alongside herself as the Champion Roper in her iconoclastic cowboy ballet Rodeo (1942).
Frederick Ashton made Franklin the romantic lead in his ballet for the Ballet Russe, Devil’s Holiday, intended to premiere in London in 1939 but, because of the outbreak of war, given an unsatisfactory opening in New York instead (from which the ballet’s reputation could not recover).
At Balanchine’s instigation, Franklin became the Ballet Russe’s ballet master in 1944 as well as principal dancer. Danilova looked at him warily and said: “So, young man, you are going to be my boss.” But their dancing partnership endured, with a global tour in the mid-Fifties.
In 1952 Franklin broke away from his usual light-hearted roles to score a critical success as Stanley Kowalski in Valerie Bettis’s ballet version of A Streetcar Named Desire, with Mia Slavenska as Blanche Dubois.
His undying popularity with the colourful refugee ballerinas of the post-Diaghilev decades was recorded in the 2006 documentary Ballets Russes, in which he and other almost equally aged legends of dance recalled their picturesque lives on the road.
After quitting leading roles, Franklin continued to perform character roles while moving into management, as director or choreographer for several American companies — Washington DC Ballet, Pittsburgh Ballet Theatre, Cincinnati Ballet, Tulsa Ballet and Dance Theatre of Harlem (for which he staged an acclaimed Creole Giselle in 1984, transplanting the tragedy to a sugar plantation in Louisiana).
Remarkably, Franklin joined American Ballet Theatre at the age of 80, performing veteran character roles such as the Tutor in Swan Lake — which he performed on ABT’s London tour in 2009 aged 94.
He was appointed CBE in 2004, and in 2011 won a Bessie Award for Lifetime Achievement, America’s highest cultural accolade.
He is survived by his partner of 48 years, William Ausman.
Frederic Franklin, born June 13 1914, died May 4 2013

Guardian:

Your editorial and Tom Clark’s article on 28 May highlight round two of the failure of the Private Finance Initiative, imaginatively called PFI2 by Cameron, but fails to mention just how disastrous PFI1 continues to be for the NHS, schools and the police. The Tories introduced this financial strategy to build public buildings with private finance and thereby avoid the debt appearing in the overall government borrowing figures; Labour picked up the baton with enthusiasm and is now embarrassed to mention the word. PFI contracts meant finance was raised at higher interest rates than those the government itself would need to pay. Hospitals and NHS trusts, such as the South London Health Care Trust, are lumbered for years with outrageous interest repayments following the building completion.
The Commons Treasury committee noted: “The cost of capital for a typical PFI project is currently over 8% – double the long-term government gilt rate of approximately 4%. The difference in finance costs means that PFI projects are significantly more expensive to fund over the life of a project. This represents a significant cost to taxpayers.”
The committee saw no evidence of other savings or benefits, despite claims that major infrastructure projects were completed more timely. The PFI provider, be it Barclays or Innisfree or Taylor Woodrow, benefits from a long future stream of interest income.
It’s surely time for political parties of all hues to commit to halt the destruction being wrought in the NHS. It is one simple step: cancelling the debts – Barclays et al have already had their financial outlay paid back several times over.
Martin Allen
Lewisham People Before Profit

Your report (Goldman Sachs and UBS to lead Royal Mail float, 30 May) stating that banks appointed by the government will receive £30m for their work on the sale of Royal Mail is misleading. We have agreed fees which are competitive compared with previous privatisations and which represent good value for taxpayers. No decision has been taken on what form a sale will take. The appointed banks will only be paid if the government decides that an IPO represents the best option. Should we proceed with an IPO, and in line with normal practice, these banks will receive a tiny percentage of the amount raised in the share offering, rather than a percentage of the overall market capitalisation of Royal Mail. Royal Mail’s market valuation is still to be determined, so any figures putting a value on either the company or an IPO are speculation. As is normal, full details of advisers’ fees will be published in any IPO prospectus and we expect the National Audit Office to scrutinise them.
Michael Fallon MP
Minister of state for business and enterprise

Google CEO Eric Schmidt says his company should “pay the taxes that are legally required” (Report, 27 May). In that case, Google should pay UK corporation tax on all its operations in the UK. That is what is legally required. It is not legally required for Google to route its income stream through low-tax jurisdictions such as Ireland. Google does indeed have a fiduciary responsibility to its shareholders, but the laws governing this responsibility do not specifically state that companies should seek to avoid tax. That is merely Mr Schmidt’s own interpretation of those laws. Avoiding tax is legally possible, but we all know that doing what is legal and doing what is right are not always the same thing. Mr Schmidt needs to make up his mind. Will Google continue to be regarded as a company of high ethical and moral standards, one which does no harm? Or will it become just another profit-maximising multinational? Time to choose.
Morgen Witzel
Fellow, Centre for Leadership Studies, University of Exeter Business School
• As the unpaid volunteer treasurer of a village social club struggling to survive in a difficult economic climate and to provide a valuable amenity for a village community, I was upset to receive from HMRC a letter threatening a possible surcharge because payment of the club’s VAT was two days late. In view of the fact that many very rich multinational companies are avoiding some taxes altogether and other companies are able to negotiate cosy settlements of disputed bills, it does make me wonder where HMRC’s priorities lie.
David Robbie
Stafford
• Dave Hartnett, formerly of HMRC, might have taken his generous public pension and gone to work with Tax Research UK, UK Uncut, or even Christian Aid. His unique expertise would have been welcomed and, I assume, he doesn’t want for much materially. Instead he prefers to advise overseas governments on tax “policy” for Deloitte (Report, 28 May). Is enough never enough for some?
Nigel Gann
Chiselborough, Somerset

Wildlife legislation provides for the protection of our wildlife. The licensing procedure, which has been prominent recently in this paper (Comment, 25 May), exists to allow, but only where there is a valid justification, an activity affecting a plant or animal which would otherwise be illegal. Natural England issues many individual licences each year for a number of different purposes which are set down in law and vary from the protection of wild flora and fauna, research and conservation surveys, to the prevention, in exceptional cases, of serious damage to livestock and crops, public health and air safety.
Two recent licences appear to have had thorough technical assessments, including detailed economic, commercial and welfare considerations. In the case of a single pheasant shoot it seems that a significant range of options were tried: the use of brash wigwams, car radios, gas guns, scarecrows, flashing lights, reflective tape and diversionary feeding included. The granting of licences to a free-range poultry producer and to a commercial shoot to remove (but not kill) buzzards predating on young reared birds was in response to exceptional but intractable problems. Without such a licencing system we risk consigning free-range chickens to sheds and the viability of responsible shooting, which can play a vital part in conservation of habitat and many species.
We need an informed debate on the role of licencing. We pledge our commitment to maintaining this debate with rational and evidence-based dialogue with all who care for wildlife.
Teresa Dent
Chief executive, Game & Wildlife Conservation Trust
• We were horrified at the revelation that licences have been granted to destroy buzzard nests and kill or capture adult birds. We are shocked that this has happened without any reference to the public, who clearly expressed their opposition when plans to spend £375,000 on research that would have allowed similar activities were proposed last year. It is very concerning that this information was only released after invoking an application through the environmental information regulations. In short, we think that it is wrong for buzzard control licences to be issued to protect commercial shooting interests, especially as the full impact of the release of non-native gamebirds on England’s wildlife has not been properly established. It is wrong that there has been no public scrutiny of these decisions and it is wrong that we only heard of these decisions after the nests have been destroyed.
We urge the secretary of state, Owen Paterson, to issue a clear statement that licences will not be issued to kill a native bird of prey to protect commercial gamebirds. This is a simple step which could easily be taken, but it is vital to reassure stakeholders and the public that his department is acting in the public interest and standing up for wildlife. Nature is in crisis and Defra must focus its energies towards addressing this issue: we don’t believe destroying nests of one of our few success stories is the right way forward.
Mike Clarke Chief executive, Royal Society for the Protection of Birds
Stephanie Hilborne Chief executive, The Wildlife Trusts
Andy Atkins Executive director, Friends of the Earth
Debbie Pain Director of conservation, Wildfowl & Wetlands Trust
Tony Gent Chief executive, Amphibian and Reptile Conservation
Gavin Grant Chief executive, Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals
Barbara Handley Chair, Hawk and Owl Trust
Paul Irving Chairman, Northern England Raptor Forum
Mark Jones Executive director, Humane Society International/UK
Jennifer Lonsdale Director, Environmental Investigation Agency
Robbie Marsland UK director, International Fund for Animal Welfare
Suzi Morris UK Director, World Society for the Protection of Animals (UK)
Jill Nelson Chief executive, People’s Trust for Endangered Species
David Ramsden Head of conservation, Barn Owl Trust
Dave Williams Chair, Badger Trust
Chris Butler-Stroud Chief executive, Whale and Dolphin Conservation

The excellent articles by Simon Jenkins and Seumas Milne on ill-advised military involvement in Syria (May 29) bring to mind Cicero’s words: Parvi enim sunt foris arma, nisi et consilium domi (Armed forces abroad are of little value, unless there is prudent counsel at home).
Cal McCrystal
London
• Why such outrage about “secret” detentions in Afghanistan (British forces are detaining dozens in Afghanistan, 29 May)? We’re doing exactly the same in Northern Ireland. Martin Corey is now in his third year of detention without trial. Not even his lawyer has been told why he is considered to be a risk.
Moya St Leger
Twickenham, Middlesex
• Amir Ofek seems to forget (Letters, 30 May), that Archbishop Desmond Tutu called for the World Cup to come to South Africa after the ending of that country’s version of apartheid.
Brian Capaloff
Falkirk
• For a similar story, movingly told in verse, readers are advised to turn to Brecht’s 1922 poem On the Infanticide Marie Farrar, available on the internet (We’re all upset about baby 59. So what else do we agree on?, 30 May).
Nicholas Jacobs
London
• Joyce Hawthorn (Letters, 27 May) should not be too surprised to find toadstools sprouting at this time of year. I spotted my first Calocybe gambosa, commonly known as St George’s mushroom, on 13 April, a full 10 days before its “official” arrival time.
John Slater
Liverpool
• I enjoyed Stuart Jeffries’s account of his iPhone being stolen (G2, 29 May), but why does one buy a tin of rhubarb?
Igor Cusack
Birmingham
• I thought it was hypocrisy that was always “eye-watering” (Letters, 30 May).
John Shirley
London
• How many more times can we approach the absolute limit?
Mike Cooper
Kirkbymoorside, North Yorkshire

The charities which report that half-a-million people are now dependent on food banks seem to do so on the basis that if the government realises what is happening, it will reverse its welfare cuts (Welfare cuts have caused hunger and destitution, report charities, 30 May). On the contrary, we need to wake up to the fact that this is all part of Mr Cameron’s idea of the “big society” in which, just as in our Victorian past and beyond, welfare-funding for the lower orders was dependent on, and provided by, the discretion of their more-affluent neighbours.
There was no significant fiscal-based support for the poor, but merely an obligation on the part of the better-off to comply with the seven corporal works of mercy which required them, as Christians keen to enter heaven, to feed the hungry, tend the sick, house the homeless etc. It is this, the compassion of the giver, whether driven by religious duty or slick conscience-tugging TV adverts, that is to be the mainstay of our future welfare provision, with lower levels of provision coupled with planned lower direct taxation which will put available money into the donors’ pockets.
Cameron has stated that the increase in food banks is proof the big society is working and his government, with little opposition from Labour, is currently assessing, through trial and error, just how much state spending on welfare can be replaced by charitable giving. We can expect more alarm from charities as more and more responsibilities are pumped into them. This is the Tories’ brave new world, “compassionate” in giving, “conservative” in lowering taxes, a system that failed miserably in the past and will condemn millions to penury in the future.
Colin Burke
Manchester
• It is time to question the sanity of running a benefit system which gives money with one hand and then takes it back with four more in the bedroom tax, the housing benefit cap, the £500 overall benefit cap and the council tax. It imposes homelessness because benefit claimants cannot pay the rent (Bedroom tax ‘will force tens of thousands on to the streets’, 27 May) and hunger because they run out of money and food banks cannot meet demand (Food banks struggle to meet demand, 28 May). 
When creating the monster with five hands the government knew there were not enough single-bedroom properties to accommodate people forced into downsizing. Lord Freud, minister for welfare reform, told peers: “I recognise that there is not the sufficient range of stock in many areas that would enable landlords always to suitably house people according to the size of their household.” (Hansard HL 14 December 2011. Welfare reform bill: column 1306.)
Meanwhile, the Treasury cut the funding of the council tax benefit by 10% and the secretary of state for communities and local government forced local authorities to charge benefits, already reduced by the bedroom tax and other imposts, between 8.5% to 30% of the council tax, knowing many cannot pay. Disabled people suffer from both taxed benefits and cut services.
Rev Paul Nicolson
Taxpayers Against Poverty
• We, the Quakers of Tottenham Meeting, have carefully considered the question of using our Sunday collections towards food banks. In an austerity-era approach to the problems faced by civil society, food banks and the volunteers that run them are filling a yawning gap created by frozen wages, rising food prices, and fuel bills. While we recognise the importance of emergency food aid, and the moral imperative behind the need to support it, in whatever way we can, we strongly believe that the access to food is a fundamental human right. We believe that this therefore is a social justice issue disguising itself in such a way as to allow government to ignore hunger and its obligation, committed to when the UK ratified the international covenant on economic social and cultural rights (ICESCR).
What is the right to food?: “States that sign the covenant agree to take steps to the maximum of their available resources to achieve progressively the full realisation of the right to adequate food, both nationally and internationally.” (ICESCR 1966: article 2(1), 11(1) and 23.; Ziegler 2012.)
We urge all, at the same time as supporting food banks, to remind the government of its own obligations.
Margaret Roe
Elder, Quakers of Tottenham Meeting

Independent:

At the age of 55, in 2008, I chose to withdraw from complicity in the destruction of the NHS, as Charles Fletcher (letter, 29 May) indicates many others are planning to do.
Starting in 1981 I had been happy to provide one-in-two night and weekend cover, same-day appointments, minor injury management, minor surgery – all the things that people say they want. I would have been delighted to continue, in a fully integrated primary healthcare team, providing a full GP service, but successive governments all felt they knew better and incrementally destroyed the system.
You and many others have not yet fully grasped what is happening to the NHS. It is being intentionally destroyed in order that the sick and injured can be fully exploited for private profit. Doctors, nurses and even patients are being systematically demonised to facilitate the process and shift the blame from government.
Wake up! Get angry!
Steve Ford
ex-GP
Haydon Bridge, Northumberland
There has been considerable discussion about the rise in remuneration for GPs and the changes in out of hours services following the contract changes brought in by the previous government. However there were other changes that occurred including the relaxation of the requirement for GPs in full-time partnership to attend their surgery five days a week and a change in payments, making it less attractive financially to replace a partner than to hire a salaried doctor.
GPs are treated as independent contractors (if they are partners) and thus their income is a share of the profits of the practice even though most of their expenses are either fully paid or substantially subsidised by the monopoly of the NHS. Many younger doctors are trapped in practices run by older GPs and have little prospect of partnership or any meaningful role in practice development.
Surely now is the time to end the dominant role of the GP partners and oblige them to give a partnership after a certain period of time as a salaried doctor (they are all similarly qualified and have annual appraisals) when the doctor will have settled in to the practice and locality.
The NHS is in a powerful position to require this and I consider that patients would benefit from opening up general practice to make it a more attractive career. Too often one can only hear the voices of GP partners and their representatives, rather than of the considerable number of salaried GPs, let alone their patients.
Dr Bridget Burt
Yeovil, Somerset
The big problem is that these days if a GP works at night they will not work the next day as well. This is a “shift system” (letter, 24 May), unlike in the “old days” when we used to work both night and day (letter, 27 May).
Who will pay for extra GPs? I am sure there would be no problem with providing better GP access, day or night, if there were more of us.
Dr Pam Martin
GP, London SE14
 
Atos tests can slow veterans’ recovery
The news that disabled war veterans are being “humiliated” by the benefits crackdown (28 May) is distressing.
Combat Stress, like many charities working with injured military veterans, has heard stories from those we treat regarding the reassessment process. The veterans we work with are proud, brave, honourable men and women who are living with mental wounds as a result of their military service. They want to work but the trauma they have suffered prevents this, and they often find it difficult to reliably undertake even small everyday tasks. A trip to the shops or a knock at the door can raise anxiety levels and trigger flashbacks to their traumatic experiences.
Being reassessed by Atos could increase anxiety and can slow or even reverse the recovery process. All of our veterans have been in full-time employment but the journey back can be difficult and protracted.
Last week a High Court ruling stated that the reassessment process put those with mental health problems at a substantial disadvantage, and subsequently people could be unwilling to report their condition due to “shame or fear of discrimination”.
We ask Atos and the Department for Work and Pensions to ensure that psychological injuries be given the same consideration as physical wounds. A lack of understanding can perpetuate the suffering of those brave veterans who have managed to seek help.
Commodore Andrew Cameron
Chief Executive, Combat Stress
Leatherhead, Surrey
As a disabled ex-serviceman, I was judged by Atos on three occasions to be fit for work (subsequently overturned by the appeals tribunal).
The assistance I received to find work took the form of being ordered to attend the offices of a private sector workplace supplier on pain of losing my benefits. The offices were on the first floor of a building with no disabled access,
I need to use a wheelchair. After my alleged failure to attend the interview, I received no more offers of help.
Robert Thomas
Botcheston, Leicestershire
 
Dawkins can  go to heaven
As a regular reader of The Independent and a life-long Catholic I would like to thank you for your coverage of my Church’s activities. However, the report on hell (29 May) left me wondering.
Cardinal Newman wrote a book called The Development of Christian Doctrine, a concept very difficult for many of us Catholics to take in, let alone our secularist friends. Our understanding of Christ’s teaching increases, hopefully, and therefore changes, and mistakes of the past are rejected, all of which can be very confusing to those of us who seek security in the frills of belief and piety rather than careful understanding.
Papal infallible pronouncements, for instance, are very rare and subject to interpretation and even reformulation; Pope John XXIII made it clear that he had no intention of being infallible. As for the pronouncements of minor Vatican officials, the less said the better.
I have come to the conclusion that the most important thing to understand about Our Lord’s life and teaching is that the Almighty loves everyone, even Richard Dawkins whom I hope to meet in heaven when all shall be clear and we shall have passed (Newman again) “ex umbris et imaginibus in veritatem” – from shadows and images into the truth.
Kevin Dean
Blackburn, Lancashire
 
Do Catholics go to an Islamic, Protestant, or Buddhist hell? If we’re to consider such nonsense, at least let’s have a level playing-field.
D W Evans
Leeds
 
Diabetes and Tesco partnership
Joanna Blythman (Voices, 29 May) suggests that our work with food and pharmaceutical companies may be influencing our “interpretation of data and policy goals”.
It doesn’t. Diabetes UK has a long history of providing evidence-based advice to people with diabetes and those at risk of type 2 diabetes.
Take Tesco, the subject of Ms Blythman’s article. Yes, we are pleased to have been chosen as its national charity partner because it means we will be able to spend £10m on research into a vaccine for type 1 diabetes and on supporting those who have diabetes or are at risk of developing type 2 diabetes.
But this has zero influence on what we think about the issues relating to type 2 diabetes prevention and the facts on this speak for themselves. We took a strong stand on food policy when we decided not to sign up for the Responsibility Deal. We also have a track record of advising people to maintain a healthy weight to reduce risk of type 2 diabetes.
Barbara Young
Chief Executive, Diabetes UK
London NW1
 
Why I won’t  vote on Europe
I voted against the Common Market in 1975 and am still an instinctive anti. I believe that most people, like me, will not have the time, knowledge or inclination to research the economic questions involved.
I have gone to the polls in every village, district, county, Westminster and European election for 52 years. A question as involved as whether we should leave the EU is best left to the MPs we elected for that purpose. 
If it is decided by referendum, the result will depend on how much money firms and individuals put into the campaigns, the wording of the question, and prejudice. I will not be voting in any referendum. 
R F Stearn
Old Newton, Suffolk
 
Blamed for all  the world’s ills
I am one of those 1947 baby- boomers on whose watch, according to Michael McCarthy, “the Earth went wrong” (“The life that disappeared while boomers had their fun”, 30 May).
Having been blamed for everything else in sight, I suppose it was only a matter of time before we got it in the neck for the end of the world. Mr McCarthy acknowledges that some baby-boomers may actually have done some good in their time, but that is not enough: we are all, yet again, to be personally responsible for everything that has gone wrong in the last 65 years.
I’m sorry, but I just did not have enough time to fit it all in.
Patricia Lloyd
Nottingham
 
No joke
If the word “actress” is no longer permitted (letter, 30 May), what happens to our treasured “as the bishop said to the actress” double-entendres? “As the bishop said to the actor” is out of the question, if we accept the Church of England’s word that there can be no gay bishops.
Peter Forster
London N4
 
End this scourge
Many of your correspondents blame religion for the outrage perpetrated at Woolwich, perhaps rightly so. Will they therefore join with me in calling for our withdrawal from the European Convention on Human Rights so that we may legislate away this scourge on our national life? Presumably at gunpoint, and with much use of re-education camps…?
Thought not.
R S Foster
Sheffield
 
Refugees
Nicky Fraser (letter, 30 May), discussing lineside flora on the railways, says that weeds are unlucky flowers that have landed in the wrong place. I shall now be more appreciative of the acres of Japanese knotweed and parrot’s feather.
Adrian Durrant
Eastbourne, East Sussex
 
And the rest
Your poll about the effect on voters of Boris Johnson’s extra-marital activities (30 May) unaccountably omitted the option: “I would never have voted for this self-serving right-wing narcissist anyway, so the question is redundant”.
Michael McCarthy
London W13

Times:

T. S. Eliot called Kipling a ‘great writer’ of hymns, ballads and epigraphs, possessed of ‘virtuosity’ and ‘a kind of second sight’
Sir, Orwell did indeed state of Kipling that “During five literary generations every enlightened figure has despised him … he is morally insensitive and aesthetically disgusting” (“Kipling: I stole Jungle Book stories”, May 29). However, this was just the starting point of a largely defensive article on Kipling published in Horizon (February 1942), which finishes with: “Even his worst follies seem less shallow and less irritating than the ‘enlightened’ utterances of the same period.”
Perhaps Orwell summed up his attitude to Kipling on the latter’s death: “For my own part I worshipped Kipling at thirteen, loathed him at seventeen, enjoyed him at twenty, despised him at twenty-five, and now again rather admire him” (New English Weekly, January 1936.) It may be worth noting that just after the lines quoted in the first paragraph above, Orwell speaks of “the way in which quotations are parroted to and fro without any attempt to look up their context or discover their meaning”.
John McCart
Belfast
Sir, Kipling’s admission that he used Inuit-related material in The Jungle Book should come as no surprise.
The World’s Classics edition of The Second Jungle Book long ago noted that he had to resort to a printed source for details of the geography of the NorthWest Passage in the Inuit story Quiquern, as the concentration of exotic place-names itself would suggest.
Kipling had no first-hand knowledge of the area around Baffin Island and did not hesitate to exploit those who had.
Graham Anderson
Canterbury
Sir, Your representation of Kipling offers a one-sided view of the writer, the man and his achievement. While Kipling describes the “stories I have stolen”, evidently that connecting the Law of the Jungle and the Inuit “rules for the division of spoils” would better be described as allusion than theft. Quite scholarly allusion, at that.
The ever incendiary George Orwell’s critique of Kipling is invoked — the poet is described in a more scholarly and less emotional way by T. S. Eliot, who calls Kipling a “great writer” of hymns, ballads and epigraphs, possessed of “virtuosity” and “a kind of second sight”.
Anthony Lazarus
London SW15
Sir, The statement by the seller of “Rudyard Kipling’s letter to an unknown woman” that “the document casts a shadow over one of the best-loved works of children’s fiction”, while correctly claiming that Kipling indulged in plagiarism, appears to imply that this revelation is something new.
If this is the case then it would seem that the seller is himself at best poorly conversant with the poet’s other works, for Kipling in his introduction to the Barrack-Room Ballads had already clearly and publicly acknowledged that he drew on other men’s work, as is quite explicit in “When ‘Omer smote ‘is bloomin’ lyre, / He’d ‘eard men sing by land an’ sea; / An’ what he thought ‘e might require, / ‘E went an’ took — the same as me.”
Whatever George Orwell’s five generations of “enlightened persons” might think, there are many who recognise Rudyard Kipling for the outstanding storyteller that he was.
Andrew Knox
Dunsford, Devon

What are the safeguards and mechanisms to ensure that any UK-supplied weaponry won’t be used to commit human rights abuses?
Sir, The Foreign Secretary William Hague talks of the “carefully controlled circumstances” under which the UK might send weapons to opposition forces in Syria.
What might these be? What are the credible safeguards and mechanisms which will ensure any UK-supplied weaponry won’t be used to commit human rights abuses by groups that already have a chequered record?
From a distance of several thousand miles, in what way is the UK able to monitor the use of its military equipment? In a month’s time? In six months’ time?
And how will the UK or any other EU country ensure that its weapons won’t be transferred from one opposition group to another — or even, indeed, that they won’t be forcibly seized by “less desirable” groups, even by fighters linked to al-Qaeda?
In the future, far from thanking countries such as Britain for its intervention, civilians in Syria may yet come to curse the ready availability of UK-supplied arms if those arms are being used by out-of-control opposition militia rampaging around a fast-disintegrating country.
Allan Hogarth
Head of Policy and Government Affairs, Amnesty International UK
London EC2

Rather than encouraging the fast-tempo music which many shops now play, research suggests that silence encourages more purchases
Sir, A factor in the decline in high street sales is loud piped music (Business, May 30). In 1982 Ronald Milliman showed how to manipulate shoppers’ behaviour by the type of music being played. The music industry seized on this, but what Milliman actually said was that sales were 38.2 per cent less when fast-tempo music, rather than slow tempo or no music, was played. Almost every shop now plays fast-tempo music.
In 1993 a paper by Yalch and Spangenberg showed that the average amount spent per person was highest when no music was playing.
Performing rights agencies encourage businesses to play music so that they can charge for licence fees and argue that music is essential for increased sales. But businesses that don’t play background music, such as John Lewis and Primark, are thriving. Many of us prefer to shop in peace.
D. Lewis
Edinburgh

The description ‘Moonies’ may be colloquial but it is still a term of contempt for what is a bona fide religion and charity
Sir, Discussing radical Islam after the Woolwich murder, Janice Turner writes that “Like the Moonies or the Jonestown community, these groups are cults. Cults of hate from which young people should be protected and, if necessary, deprogrammed” (May 25) Such reference to the Unification Church is out of place and hatred is certainly not one of the Church’s hallmarks. Even the name “Moonie” is discriminatory. The Unification Church used to be referred to colloquially as the “Moonies” and it’s hardly surprising that the term is still around, but that doesn’t obscure the fact that it was, and still is, a term of contempt. Responsible media outlets should not use it.
Nor should they describe the Unification Church as a cult. A four-year investigation by the British government in the 1980s failed to substantiate allegations of brainwashing, breaking up of families and exploitation of members, and the Church was reinstated to the register of charities as a bona fide religion for public benefit and charitable in law.
The Unification Movement has for decades worked for greater understanding and unity between world religions in order to avoid bigoted and narrow-minded religious perspectives becoming influential in our society.
Simon Cooper
UK Press Officer, Unification Movement
London W2

A better understanding of the Data Communications Bill would ensure that the public’s natural opposition would diminish
Sir, The Government must get better at explaining the Data Communications bill. Opponents are happy to let the public conflate the retention of the fact of communication with the retention of the content. This naturally causes people to oppose the legislation.
Your opinion piece by Nick Herbert (May 29) did nothing to clarify the difference between the content and the data about a communication.
After an atrocity such as the murder in Woolwich the authorities would be able to look at the historical archive of communications data to and from the suspects to establish which others may have been involved. This would allow the security services to identify who should be subject to future attention and possibly stop any plot to commit similar attacks in the future.
Rob Allison
Stoke D’Abernon, Surrey

Telegraph:

Dear Waheed,
Thank you for asking me to set out why I am sympathetic to the possibility of equal marriage and have a different view from that stated in the Church of England’s response to the Equal Civil Marriage consultation. That response from the Archbishops of Canterbury and York in June 2012, written in consultation with the Archbishops’ Council and House of Bishops, was prepared under the pressure of the government’s absurdly short period for consultation on a major legislative social and legal change. The Archbishops affirmed what the Church has always taught (with Judaism and Islam) that marriage is a gift of God in creation, the lifelong union of a man and a woman. A subsequent document has been produced by the Church of England’s Faith and Order Commission on ‘Men and Women in Marriage’. That this is ‘for study’ indicates a discussion continues to run within the Church of England. This was acknowledged in a recent briefing from the Church of England to MPs for the Commons Report stage which stated: “the Church of England recognises the evident growth in openness to and understanding of same sex relations in wider society. Within the membership of the Church there are a variety of views about the ethics of such relations, with a new appreciation of the need for, and value of faithful and committed lifelong relationships recognised by civil partnerships.”
You, as a gay Muslim, will not be surprised that there are a variety of views within the Church of England where we are experiencing rapid change similar to that in the wider society. This is complex to express, partly because there are those who see this issue as fundamental to the structure of Christian faith. It is also complex because of the worldwide nature of the Anglican Communion in which what might be said carefully in one cultural context (for example, the USA) can be deeply damaging in another (for example, parts of Africa). Change and development are essential in the Church, as they are in life, and part of the genius of a missionary Church is its ability to root the good news of Jesus Christ in varied cultures in every time and place. One of the difficulties now is that globalisation and communication mean it is much more difficult for Christianity to develop in this culturally sensitive way. There has been a very uncomfortable polarisation of views even in our own country.
Whilst marriage is robust and enduring, what is meant by marriage has developed and changed significantly. For example, the widespread availability of contraception from the mid- twentieth century onwards took several decades to gain acceptance for married couples by the Lambeth Conference in 1958. The newer forms of the Church of England’s marriage service have since recognised that the couple may have children. Over the last fifty years the Church of England has come to accept that marriages intended to be lifelong can break down and that on occasion marriage after divorce can be celebrated in the context of Church. It is also the case that most couples now live together before they marry. This happens without censure from the Church which continues to conduct these marriages joyfully even though the Church’s teaching is that sexual relationships are properly confined to marriage.
The desire for the public acknowledgement and support of stable, faithful, adult, loving same sex sexual relationships is not addressed by the six Biblical passages about homosexuality which are concerned with sexual immorality, promiscuity, idolatry, exploitation and abuse. The theological debate is properly located in the Biblical accounts of marriage, which is why so many Christians see marriage as essentially heterosexual. However, Christian morality comes from the mix of Bible, Christian tradition and our reasoned experience. Sometimes Christians have had to rethink the priorities of the Gospel in the light of experience. For example, before Wilberforce, Christians saw slavery as Biblical and part of the God-given ordering of creation. Similarly in South Africa the Dutch Reformed Church supported Apartheid because it was Biblical and part of the God-given order of creation. No one now supports either slavery or Apartheid. The Biblical texts have not changed; our interpretation has.
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The pace of change with regard to same sex relations has been considerable. The Wolfenden report (1957) and Sexual Offences Act (1967) decriminalised homosexual acts in private between men aged over 21 years in England and Wales. This received cautious support from the Church of England at the time. The changes they introduced are now unchallenged and wholly welcomed.
At the co-educational North London Grammar School I attended from 1965-72, there were 2 effeminate gay lads in my year who were no threat to the rest of us but who were regularly beaten up just for being different. At times school for them must have been a brutal experience. What they went through was unkind and unjust but I don’t remember a teacher intervening on their behalf. I am thankful things have changed and we now have a greater sense of equality and fairness. In the current debates it is striking that within the Anglican Communion one of the strongest supporters of same sex marriage is Archbishop Desmond Tutu. From his experience of the racism of Apartheid he sees same sex marriage as primarily a matter of justice.
When the proposal for civil partnerships was debated in 2004 the Church of England was largely hostile. I am grateful that in the Archbishops’ opposition to equal marriage they have expressed their support for civil partnerships and I hope this will help the Church of England towards affirming these relationships liturgically. Like the Archbishops now, I used to think that it was helpful to distinguish between same sex civil partnerships and heterosexual marriage. Many in the churches think the commonly used description of civil partnerships as ‘gay marriage’ is a category error. However, the relationships I know in civil partnerships seem to be either of the same nature as some marriages or so similar as to be indistinguishable. Indeed, the legal protection and public proclamation which civil partnership has afforded gay relationships appears to have strengthened their likeness to marriage in terms of increasing commitment to working on the relationship itself, to contributing to the wellbeing of both families of origin, and to acting as responsible and open members of society. Open recognition and public support have increased in civil partnerships those very qualities of life for which marriage itself is so highly celebrated. It is not surprising this now needs recognition in law.
The possibility of ‘gay marriage’ does not detract from heterosexual marriage unless we think that homosexuality is a choice rather than the given identity of a minority of people. Indeed the development of marriage for same sex couples is a very strong endorsement of the institution of marriage. The ‘quadruple locks’ contained in the Bill provide extraordinarily robust protection for those religious bodies, including the Church of England, unwilling or unable to conduct same sex marriage without accusation of being homophobic.
This subject provokes strong feelings but in most churches a variety of views will be found. I hope this letter helps to say briefly why there is a greater variety of views within the Church of England than can be expressed in the formal statements of the Church or House of Bishops. At its best the Church is committed to the Spirit of God leading us into all Truth in what is a complex period of social change.
The Rt Revd Nicholas Holtam
The Bishop of Salisbury

SIR – Interpol’s secretary general has held up the handling of William Browder’s case as a shining example of how well Interpol works (“Interpol makes the world a safer place”, telegraph.co.uk, May 28). Sadly, there are plenty of examples of Interpol failing to weed out attempts to use its global network against human rights defenders, journalists and political opponents.
Russia, for example, was able to use Interpol to pursue Petr Silaev, the recognised political refugee being prosecuted for “hooliganism” in Russia after his involvement in a demonstration against a motorway development. Mr Silaev has already been arrested and detained as a result. We asked Interpol to consider his case at the same time as Mr Browder’s but are still waiting for an answer.
Patricia Poleo, an award-winning Venezuelan journalist, had to wait 18 months for Interpol to recognise that her case was political despite the United States recognising her as a refugee. We have seen similar cases from countries including Sri Lanka, Iran and Indonesia.
Interpol was right to act quickly to stop Russia using it to disrupt Mr Browder’s global campaign for justice for his lawyer Sergei Magnitsky. This level of responsiveness should not, though, be reserved for famous hedge-fund managers.
Jago Russell
Fair Trials International
London EC4
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SIR – Peter Oborne’s article (“Is Interpol fighting for truth and justice, or helping the villains?”, Comment, May 22) was probably instrumental in making Interpol remove William Browder from its list. But there are many other cases in which Interpol continues to act as an international department of the Russian secret police. One of the most appalling is that of Akhmed Zakaev, the exiled democratic prime minister of Chechnya, who has been given political asylum in this country. Moscow has sought his extradition from Britain, Denmark, and most recently from Poland; in all three cases, its outlandish charges of “terrorism” collapsed spectacularly in the courts.
The real reason why Mr Zakaev is wanted in Russia is his campaign to bring to justice those responsible for war crimes and genocide in Chechnya. It is a scandal that Interpol is willing to assist the attempts to silence him.
Vladimir Bukovsky
Vice President, The Freedom Association
Cambridge
SIR – Interpol should be given its due for removing Mr Browder from its list. But it should be doing a lot more to enforce its own constitution, which prohibits any involvement in political activities and obliges the organisation to act in the spirit of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.
My client Vitaly Arkhangelsky, once a highly successful businessman, had to flee Russia to save his life after his business was taken over by Putinist raiders. Mr Arkhangelsky brought a number of lawsuits in Western courts against his powerful enemies at the top of the Russian regime. The next thing he knew, he was wanted by Interpol on a Russian request, and arrested in France.
He has been given a form of protection in France called subsidiary protection. Mr Arkhangelsky’s Russian persecutors are currently under criminal investigation in France, but Interpol continues to help them to pursue him by keeping the Red Notice active and public. All our appeals to Interpol have fallen upon deaf ears.
William Bourdon
Former Secretary General, International Federation for Human Rights
Paris
Praising appearances
SIR – I am shocked to read that Jo Swinson (Comment, May 28) advises mothers not to tell their daughters that they look beautiful. The best way to enable young women to resist pressures from the media and celebrity culture is to help them develop a healthy self-confidence. This is done by encouraging girls to believe that they are good enough and attractive as they are.
If given enough positive feedback from both parents, girls will not grow up with a desperate need to pursue illusions of beauty and worth outside of themselves. Young women blessed with such early influences will be better able to go on to achieve more.
Susan Moses
Southwell, Nottinghamshire
SIR – I will continue to tell my children that they are beautiful. My daughters – one a successful grown-up woman, the other still a child, both adore it when I do, and as a proud and doting father, so do I.
I still find time to celebrate their achievements and chastise them for less worthy deeds and actions. I think this is what is called balanced parenting.
Ted Smith
Chippenham, Wiltshire
Disabled children
SIR – All children have hopes and dreams, but too many children around the world struggle to realise them. This year, Unicef’s flagship report, The State of the World’s Children, focuses on those with disabilities and finds that surviving and thriving, let alone achieving dreams, can be especially tough for them.
Last year’s Paralympic Games in London were a celebration of human strength and determination. They changed the way that people look at disability. But in too many places, children with disabilities are still last in line and discriminated against.
Unicef’s report finds that disabled children are more vulnerable to malnutrition, with certain conditions, such as cystic fibrosis, making it much harder for them to absorb the nutrients they need. Other children with disabilities are hidden away from community feeding initiatives because of prejudice, and their health suffers as a result. Poor nutrition in early childhood is also leading to preventable disabilities, for example, between 250,000 and 500,000 children are at risk of becoming blind each year from vitamin A deficiency, which can easily be treated if doctors are given the funds.
The Government has a chance to address this at the UK’s Nutrition for Growth event next week, which comes just before the G8 summit. By pledging funds to tackle malnutrition, Britain and other world powers can give all children the best start in life and a better chance of turning dreams into reality.
Baroness Grey-Thompson
Jonnie Peacock
Ade Adepitan
Stefanie Reid
Shelly Woods
Natasha Baker
Richard Whitehead
Marc Woods
Peak season
SIR – Your picture of the queue of climbers approaching the summit of Everest (Features, May 28) suggests the need for a mountain railway, with climate-controlled carriages of course, and a viewing platform, restaurant and souvenir shop at the summit.
I have recently enjoyed such an excursion by rail up the Zugspitz, the highest peak in Germany. The neglected tourist potential on Everest is clear.
Paul Corser
Selborne, Hampshire

SIR – You correctly make the case that feeding more arms from Britain into Syria can only make the situation worse (Leading article, May 29). Have we no shame in continuing to cause destabilisation and misery in Middle Eastern countries, especially since the invasion of Iraq in 2003?
The removal of despotic dictators is in itself admirable if the results can be calculated to unite rather than divide. In the case of Syria there is long-standing, active support for the existing regime by Russia and other major powers. The supply of arms by EU countries to the opposition will feed the flames of war in Syria and increase the possibility of extending the area of conflict. Inevitably, relations with Russia will begin to deteriorate towards Cold War conditions.
Can we concentrate instead on trying to save Britain from economic disaster?
Barry Bond
Leigh on Sea, Essex
SIR – One presumes that an estimate of the cost of the arms to be supplied to Syria will be made, and authorisation given for that expenditure. Would it not be in Britain’s best interests, at home and abroad, to use that money and more to relieve the plight of the refugees from the conflict?
Once again a British government is attempting to untie a Gordian knot of foreign politics, sectarian hatred, tribal malevolence and foreign sedition, for which it will receive thanks from some and hatred from many more. Why can’t this country be seen trying to heal the wounds of conflict instead of creating more?
John Hill
Maidstone, Kent
SIR – The latest opinion poll (from the Pew Research Centre) shows that nearly 60 per cent of the British population do not want to see arms supplied to Syrian rebels. It is about time the Government woke up to the reality of democratic society, and stopped pretending that it has an inherited right to do as it pleases.
Timothy Stroud
Salisbury, Wiltshire
SIR – Syria exposes the fiction that 27 nations of differing backgrounds and beliefs can have a viable, unified, foreign policy. While the mutual interests of 27 countries may be aligned on an economic basis, the differing approaches to intervention in cases of aggression, protection of vulnerable populations and prevention of atrocities are too fundamental to be compromised.
In this case the right to intervene when circumstances are beyond the tolerance of a nation has trumped the fiction of political unity and a common foreign policy.
Phil Coutie
Twickenham, Middlesex
SIR – One wonders if the United Nations Security Council has been disbanded. It has responsibility under the UN Charter for world peacekeeping and world security but that is lost amid the scramblings of self-appointed world policemen anxious to get involved in another country’s civil war.
Joe Emery
Standlake, Oxfordshire

Irish Times:

Sir, – I watched the Prime Time programme on creches with sadness. How have we moved so far from the needs of vulnerable infants and toddlers that we think it acceptable to have two/three adults trying to fulfil the many and varied needs of a roomful of children?
Learning to master and control so many new tasks is driven by a child’s natural curiosity. To stifle curiosity is a shame. The balance between allowing a child the freedom to explore while keeping them safe is a challenge parents have struggled with in every civilisation.
Ask any parent of even one child how demanding and exhausting this is! Part of the answer is effective childcare has to include real support and choice for parents. – Yours, etc,
BREEDA KELLY,
St Bridget’s Terrace,
Rathnew,
Co Wicklow.
Sir, – I agree with Darren Williams (May 30th). When did it become the accepted norm to pass the full-time care and development of our babies and toddlers on to complete strangers, and why are people surprised when this practice yields such shocking results? – Yours, etc,
AOIFE WILKIN,
Terenure Park,
Dublin 6W.
Sir, – I am delighted this investigation has exposed the failings in certain childcare settings. It is high time that parents and the wider society began to examine the environment our children are in for almost 9/10 hours a day.
As a working practitioner, I was never questioned on my qualifications by parents. It was just “accepted”.
As an early years practitioner with an educational background of a BA, early childhood care and education, and completing a MA in education, I feel the childcare system in Ireland is not valued. In comparison to our European counterparts, we lack support at governmental level and managerial level. There is not enough emphasis on qualifications. The Childcare Preschool Regulations 2006 insist only on a minimum level of standards regarding development, physical, social, and emotional. In the primary school sector, a degree is the minimum qualification deemed acceptable, why not in early childhood education also?
Childcare providers, especially in the private sector, are free to employ staff with the minimum level of qualifications to meet the job description, which is currently a minimum Fetac level 5 in childcare studies. In my professional opinion, people cannot be adequately trained with the knowledge of appropriate child development and child psychology to control various child behaviour in just nine months!
Children are a precious commodity and early years education should be a priority for our legislators. At the very minimum, childcare practitioners, should have attained a degree in early education and childcare
In many settings, practitioners are overworked, undervalued and underpaid. However, this does not excuse failings in childcare. International research has shown that the years from birth to age six are the most formative of a child’s education. We need action, not words and empty promises, from our Government for our most vulnerable citizens who are the future of our country. – Yours, etc,
NATALIE WALSH,
Charlestown,
Co Mayo.
Sir, – In regard to the horrific RTÉ Prime Time footage showing the deplorable treatment of children in the care of creches.
Why are politicians and commentators asking for additional inspections from the HSE?
This body is dysfunctional in its operation, with a level of inertia that is running off the scale. The HSE is not a capable body to marshal or oversee the regulation of childcare facilities and this has been demonstrated by the numerous scandals involving childcare facilities since 2006.
I would suggest that the competent authority to co-ordinate inspections and indeed the regulation of childcare facilities are the local authorities, as they are centrally based in counties and can control the registration of creches and can also bring in the necessary human resources required to ensure a high level of service provided for parents and children throughout the country.
If the one thing Minister for Health, James Reilly achieves during his term is to dismantle the HSE, it will be a job well done. – Yours, etc,
JOE CORR,
Park Road,
Rush,
Co Dublin.

Sir, – Recent coverage regarding prophylactic mastectomy and breast reconstruction (Health + Family, May 21st) highlights some of the positive results regarding breast cancer treatment and prevention in Ireland. However, two points should be clarified. First, the article correctly highlights that the rate of post-mastectomy reconstruction during 2011 in the UK as 21 per cent, in Ireland during this period it was in fact significantly higher at 29 per cent; our current experience in 2013, with eight cancer centres treating breast disease complete with surgeons trained in both cancer and reconstructive surgery, is likely to be even higher.
Second, there is no “gold standard” in breast reconstruction. Recent research has shown that up to 90 per cent of women in the US have reconstruction primarily using breast implants; these patients can expect excellent results without the potential problems of moving tissue from other sites, as was the case for Angelina Jolie. There is no single best choice of breast reconstruction, the “gold standard” is to discuss all available options with patients and make sure that the type of reconstruction which best suits an individual patient is undertaken. – Yours, etc,
MALCOLM R KELL MD
FRCSI,
Consultant Breast Surgeon,

Sir, – The Financial Emergency Measures in the Public Interest Bill 2013 is a serious threat to trade union and democratic rights in this country. The Bill, if passed, will cut wages and pensions.
It also contains a coercive clause which threatens to freeze the increments due to workers in the public sector unless, as outlined in the explanation to the Bill, “they are covered by a collective agreement that modifies the terms of the incremental suspension and which has been registered with the Labour Relations Commission”.
The fundamental right of workers to vote on any proposal on the basis of its merit is being undermined completely. The right of trade unions to defend their members is being obliterated. At present the Government is attempting to intimidate workers into accepting the Haddington Road proposal. This legislation changes the landscape in Ireland. It is anti-worker, anti-trade union legislation.
We believe it must be opposed by all trade unions and by everyone that cares for democratic principles. We are, therefore, calling on all trade union leaders and TDs to immediately condemn the proposed legislation. To not do so is to stand against democracy and workers. – Yours, etc,
VINCENT ASTIER, SIPTU, UCD; JOHN BISSETT,Community Activist; GERARD CASEY, IFUT, UCD; THERESE CAHERTY; STEPHEN CARRINGTON, IFUT, UCD; MICHAEL CARR, Branch Chair Dublin Colleges, TUI;
EDDIE CONLON, TUI, DIT; ALAN COSTELLO, TUI, BCFE; KELLY DAVIDSON, TUI, IADT; CORMAC DEANE, TUI, IADT; Tom Dooley, Vice Chair TUI, DkIT; CLAUS DERENDA, TUI Branch Chair, IT Carlow; DES DERWIN, SIPTU, Executive Dublin Council of Trade Unions; PAT DONNELLY, TUI,ITT; KATIE DONOVAN, TUI, IADT; GRAINNE ELMORE, IADT; PAUL FARRELL, TUI, ITT; KEVIN FARRELL, TUI, ITB; FINBAR GEANEY, TUI, Dublin Trades Council; MARNIE HOLBOROW, SIPTU, DCU; FLO GAFFNEY; ANTHONY HACKETT, TUI, BCFE; FERGAL HARDIMAN, TUI, BCFE; PETER HOMAN, Impact, HSE; JOE KELLY; SEANIE LAMBE, Community Activist; HELEN MAHONY, TUI, BCFE; MARTIN MARJORAM, Branch Chair TUI, ITT; JOHN MEEHAN; GERALD MILLS, IFUT, UCD; DES McGUINNESS, DCU; FEARGHA Ni BHROIN, TUI, BCFE; DIARMUID O’BRIEN,TUI, BCFE; LENNON Ó NÁRAIGH, IFUT, UCD; CATHLEEN O NEILL, Community Activist; MARIA PARSONS, Chair TUI branch IADT; ANDREW PHELAN, ASTI; BETTY PURCELL; GERRY QUINN, Vice President TUI; Dr SIVAKUMAR RAMACHANDRAN, IADT; TOM RYAN, President, Irish Print Group, SIPTU; NIALL SMYTH, INTO; KENNETH SLOANE, TUI, Secretray DkIT; EMMA SOKELL, IFUT, UCD; THOMAS UNGER, IFUT, UCD; LAURA VENABLES, IADT; MARK WALSHE, ASTI & GERALD MILLS, IFUT, UCD,
C/o Sutton Park,

   
Sir, – I would suggest to Anthony Murphy (Rite and Reason, May 28th) that if he wishes to influence Catholic legislators then persuasion and dialogue – not silencing, excommunication and a refusal to be allowed to partake in the Eucharist and other remnants of the age of the Inquisition – are the ways forward for a Catholic. This is so not just in the 21st century, but should always have been the hallmark of a Communion based on the Gospel. – Yours, etc,
BRENDAN BUTLER,
The Moorings,
Malahide,
Co Dublin.
Sir, – It is interesting to note that 12 non-Irish medical personnel called for the inclusion of abortion for “fatal foetal abnormalities” in the Protection of Life during Pregnancy Bill, 2013 while referring to Dr Ruth Fletcher’s submission to the Joint Committee on Health and Children that “the unborn should be defined not to mean those foetuses which have lethal abnormalities and will not have a futute independent life” (May 29th).  
A further irony is the later reference to “the return of their child’s remains to Ireland”.  Despite the many heartfelt stories of those women who proceeded with their pregnancies and gave life, however short, to their babies, it seems that we are being urged, mainly by those outside Ireland, not to do so.           
What a contrast with the over 50 Irish medical personnel with their life affirming views.   At our peril we will ignore their warming of no second chance if this Bill is passed.  We have only to look to Britain where efforts to reduce the limit from 24 weeks to 20 weeks last year were unsuccessful.  
It is surprising that the World Health Organisation’s placing of Ireland among the top 25 countries for women’s safety in pregnancy is so little recognised and appreciated, and without abortion being legal here. – Yours, etc,
MARY STEWART,
Ardeskin,
Sir, – Seán Byrne’s article (Rite & Reason, April 30th) gives a very unbalanced view of community schools.
Parents of the 60,000 young people who attend our schools are generally very happy with the ethos and the inclusiveness that they experience there, as our parents’ organisation, Parents Association of Community & Comprehensive Schools, will attest.
Comprehensive schools, and later community schools, are rightly credited with bridging the gap between a highly academic and a strong vocational system. We were very innovative in having parents on our representative boards over 40 years ago. This model is proven and now the norm.
Mr Byrne alleges, without supporting evidence, that parents have little influence on key decisions in our schools, being outnumbered by all other nominees. I work with boards every day and I believe this not to be the case. Our boards operate as a local management team, a corporate entity, making important decisions for the school together. Boards can have members nominated by teachers who are parents, and vice-versa, similarly for other nominees, so simplistic labelling can be misleading.
Mr Byrne is dismissive of some of the first teachers and principals of the new schools as former members of religious orders. Our principals and teachers have a proud leadership record in the field of education, a cursory glance at Whole School Evaluation and Management, Leadership and Learning reports can testify to this continuing exemplary leadership.
Our statutory instrument makes provision for both religious instruction and worship but it is “in accordance with the rites, practice and teaching of the religious denomination to which the pupil belongs”. This respectful multidenominational aspect is very important to us. Mr Byrne states, without evidence, that in Protestant schools “whatever religion is taught is broad and uncontentious”. Are we to take from this that where there is Catholic patronage it is therefore narrow and contentious?
In our schools I am happy to agree with Mr Byrne that religion “is taught to those who wish to learn the answers to those questions provided by Christianity and other faiths”. The religion syllabus is knowledge-based rather than faith based, and looks at a broad range of religions, for those participating. Those who choose not to can be withdrawn. It is very challenging in multi-denominational schools to cater adequately and equally for all faiths and none, requiring additional resources and resourcefulness. Our paid school chaplains support us in meeting these challenges and organise religious worship appropriate to pupil needs. Mr Byrne is also wrong in his assertion that in VEC-managed community colleges chaplains are not paid by the State, they are.
Our sector has always been innovative in its thinking. We will shortly have our first community school without religious patrons. We are now reviewing our deed of trust to meet the diverse students’ needs as we have proudly and effectively done since our foundation more than 40 years ago. – Yours, etc,
CIARÁN FLYNN,
General Secretary,
Association of Community

Irish Independent:

* My heart goes out to the parents and families of the children who featured in the RTE ‘Prime Time’ programme about the treatment of children in some creches.
Also in this section
Nobody listening as families drown in debt
Let’s dispense with the fig-leaf of discretion
Pope’s message gives hope for us all
Watching what happened to the young children in these creches makes me wonder what life is really all about.
The sadness of what happened to the children is unbearable for me and for so many parents, as I’m sure it is for everybody who watched the programme. Our thoughts and prayers are with them.
I remember three years ago being in Ethiopia adopting our second little girl. The tragedy, sadness and suffering I saw in some parts of that country was so sad. The people, especially the children there and in other countries such as Somalia, Kenya, Niger, Burkina Faso and our own country of Ireland, need plenty of our help, support, love and prayers. Let’s not forget that 196 children died needlessly in state care in Ireland in the past.
Also, spare a thought for the nine million children who die globally each year in often horrendous circumstances. The discovery of a newborn baby boy in a sewer pipe in China makes you wonder what we really think about caring for our children. We all should be ashamed.
To live without hope is the most crushing of all burdens. Everywhere I travelled over the past 20 years with my work in the developing world, I saw children with a look of despair. I was reminded of the words of the American writer James Agee who said: “In every child who is born, under no matter what circumstances, and of no matter what parents, the potentiality of the human race is born again: and in him too, once more, and in each of us, our terrific responsibility towards human life; towards the utmost idea of goodness, of the horror of error, and of God.”
I remember the poem by Sally Meyer called ‘To My Child’ on the wall of a children’s hospice I visited:
“Just for this morning, I am going to smile when I see your face and laugh when I feel like crying. Just for this morning, I will let you choose what you want to wear, and smile and say how perfect it is.
“Just for this morning, I am going to step over the laundry, and pick you up and take you to the park and play. Just for this morning, I will leave the dishes in the sink, and let you teach me how to put that puzzle of yours together.
“Just for this afternoon, I will unplug the telephone and keep the computer off, and sit with you in the backyard and blow bubbles. Just for this afternoon, I will not yell once, not even a tiny grumble when you scream and whine for the ice cream truck, and I will buy you one if he comes by.
“Just for this afternoon, I will let you help me bake cakes, and I won’t stand over you trying to fix them.
“Just for this evening, I will hold you in my arms and tell you a story about how you were born and how much I love you. Just for this evening, I will let you splash in the tub and not get angry.
“Just for this evening, I will let you stay up late while we sit on the porch and count all the stars. Just for this evening, I will snuggle beside you for hours, and miss my favourite TV shows.
“Just for this evening, when I run my fingers through your hair as you pray, I will simply be grateful that God has given me the greatest gift ever given.
“I will think about the mothers and fathers who are searching for their missing children, the mothers and fathers who are visiting their children’s graves instead of their bedrooms, and mothers and fathers who are in hospital rooms watching their children suffer senselessly, and screaming inside that they can’t handle it any more.
“And when I kiss you goodnight, I will hold you a little tighter, a little longer. It is then that I will thank God for you, and ask him for nothing, except one more day.”
Ronan Scully
Knocknacarra, Co Galway
ABUSE HAD ME IN TEARS
* I cried myself to sleep after witnessing on ‘Prime Time’ the emotional abuse doled out by expensive creches.
The sight of a teething child, which often is symptomatic of pain and fever, being punished for being in distress was, quite frankly, appalling.
There has to be a way that, as a society, either a mam or dad can stay at home and still keep the domestic ship afloat.
Eileen O’Sullivan
Vevay Road, Bray, Co Wicklow
A HORRIFYING REPORT
* As a childcare professional and montessori pre-school teacher, I was sickened and horrified to see how the children featured in the ‘Prime Time’ programme were treated.
These people should be held accountable and never ever be allowed to work with children in any capacity whatsoever.
They should be put on a register that is available to all in the childcare sector to ensure they never work with children again.
I am sickened and so very sad that the children featured in the programme had to endure this abuse, both emotional and physical. My thoughts go out to the parents of the children.
To the Government I say: please, never let this happen again, please put finance into childcare so the people working in the sector can be valued for their work and make the children of Ireland’s welfare a priority and ensure they are nurtured.
To the ‘Prime Time’ investigation team I say, this was an extremely difficult and upsetting programme to watch – it must have been so horrific to have to witness such treatment of our young children while making this programme.
May we never have to see anything like it ever again.
Ann O’Neill
Clonmel
WHY CRECHES AT ALL?
* When I was growing up in Crumlin, my dad worked and my mum stayed at home and raised the children.
The entire neighbourhood was similar, and the only time we were aware of the phenomenon of parents leaving their children in the care of nannies or childminders was when we read or watched a film about the upper classes who seemed to bear their children simply to give them a name and then hand the duty of caring for them over to others paid to carry out this fundamental task.
Now we live in a society where, when it comes to caring for our children, we are all viewed as upper class.
Parents bring children into the world only to be forced to neglect the essential rearing of them through those first years of formation and trust.
Never mind what television reports tell us about what happens to Irish toddlers when they are in these creches.
Instead, ask why they are placed in there every day at all.
Darren Williams
Sandyford, Dublin
HUMAN QUALITIES
* Having recently qualified in childcare after years as a childminder, I applied for a job in a big creche.
Though I had loads of experience. my qualification was not to the level required by the HSE.
No matter how many more qualifications I might acquire the bottom line remains the same – I am a kind, gentle, understanding, patient and tolerant person who loves children.
I am full of common sense with good instincts and two eyes and two ears to see and hear what’s going on and react with empathy and loving care. Shame on those involved and those that put text book qualifications above human qualities when dealing with people. Children and old people should not be big business.
Geraldine O’Kane
Wicklow
Irish Independent


Astrid and Michael

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Astrid and Michael 1 st June 2013

I trot round the park today and listen to the Navy lark. I Oh dear, oh dear
Troutbridge is taking the Honorbuskin Queen back to Honorbuska, but they won’t left them land until she flies the Honorbuska flag, and they are taken over. Our gallent crew are all made cabinet ministers, but thrown into jail at the next general election. Priceless.
A quiet day off out to have luh with Astrid and Micheal, and put the world to rights.
We watch Brandy for the Parson a wonderful old film
I win at Scrabble today, just and gets just under 400, ahe might get her revenge tomorrow, I hope.

Obituary:

Leolin Price
Leolin Price, who has died aged 88, was the most senior of a trio of Euro-sceptic lawyers (the others being Michael Shrimpton and Martin Howe) who provided legal advice for the anti-Maastricht campaign in Parliament in the early 1990s; in 1993 he prepared Lord Rees-Mogg’s challenge to the ratification of the Maastricht Treaty.

Leolin Price 
6:39PM BST 30 May 2013
With his relish for argument, taste for complex legal detail and scepticism about the EU and all its works, Price was ideally suited to the role of constitutional gadfly. In the end the Maastricht rebellion proved a major headache for the government during John Major’s troubled second term as prime minister, consuming some 200 hours of debate over 23 days in committee and producing 600 amendments, many of them drafted by Price .
The dispute came close to scuppering the treaty and bringing down the government.
The European Communities (Amendment) Bill (aka the Maastricht Bill) eventually became law at the end of July 1993, but in a last-ditch effort to prevent this, the former editor of The Times Lord Rees-Mogg, supported by Price and David Pannick, QC (and backed by Sir James Goldsmith), applied for judicial review.
The substance of the case revolved around the nature of the “social protocol” which Major had secured during negotiations with Britain’s EU partners, which enabled Britain to opt out of the Social Chapter of the Treaty. The legal team argued that the protocol also increased the powers of the European Parliament — something which, under a 1978 Act, required specific parliamentary approval, which had never been given during the passage of the Bill bringing the Maastricht Treaty into British law.
The case garnered much publicity, but Rees-Mogg’s application was rejected in the court of first instance and on appeal, one judge describing as “an exaggeration” Price’s claim that the case was “perhaps the most important constitutional issue to be faced by the courts for 300 years”. The Treaty was duly ratified, and the lasting scars left on the Conservative Party have not healed to this day.
One of five children of a village schoolmaster, Arthur Leolin Price was born at Talybont-on-Usk in Breconshire and educated at Judd School, Tonbridge, from where he won a scholarship to Keble College, Oxford, to read History. During the war he served as an officer in the Royal Artillery, latterly as adjutant of the Indian Mountain Artillery Training Centre in Ambala, Punjab province.
On demob he returned to Oxford to read Law. Called to the Bar by Middle Temple in 1949, he soon established a reputation in commercial and chancery litigation. After taking Silk in 1968, as well as his work in Britain he developed a thriving international practice, representing clients in New South Wales and the Bahamas. Later he was appointed a deputy High Court judge.
Although Price was a lifelong Conservative and on the committee of the Society of Conservative Lawyers for more than two decades, he acted for Arthur Scargill during the 1980s; and in 1982 he advised Harriet Harman when, as legal officer for the National Council for Civil Liberties, she was found in contempt of court after showing restricted legal documents to a journalist. Price acted for her during the appeal process that led to the European Court of Human Rights overturning her conviction, successfully arguing that the prosecution had breached her right to freedom of expression.
On the issue of Europe, Price always put principle before party, and after the Maastricht debates he campaigned against the subsequent Nice Treaty. In 2008 he supported the spread-betting millionaire Stuart Wheeler in his legal bid to force the government to hold a referendum on the Lisbon Treaty.
Price served as a governor of Great Ormond Street Hospital, and in the 1970s successfully persuaded the Labour Chancellor Denis Healey to promote a legislative amendment permitting British royalties for JM Barrie’s Peter Pan to go to Great Ormond Street in perpetuity.
Leolin Price finally retired from work last June at the age of 88. He was appointed CBE in 1996.
He married, in 1963, Rosalind (Lindy) Lewis, the elder daughter of the Conservative peer Lord Brecon. She died in 1999, and he is survived by their two sons and two daughters.
Leolin Price, born May 11 1924, died March 24 2013

Guardian:

So, my MP Stephen Phillips earns £740,000 as a barrister to add to his MP’s salary (Report ,28 May), believing it “enables me to keep a foot in the real world – though, I accept ,a well paid one”. The average wage in Sleaford is 79% of the national average and many Lincolnshire people are struggling to find one full-time job, let alone two. If he’d like to help his party leader’s “big society”, he might better spend his extra time volunteering in one of the many local charities, which include a food bank created because of the policies of his government.
Susanna Banks
Sleaford, Lincolnshire
• I’m impressed by Leeds council’s initiative (Leeds council tackles bedroom tax with semantic solution, 30 May). There are people in overcrowded homes who’d love just the right amount of bedrooms, let alone a spare one – perhaps even people working on low pay in cramped accommodation who are really happy about paying for others to have spare rooms or excess “non-specific rooms”.
Sarah Bell
Oldham
• Not “everyone” complains about having to phone at 8am, often repeatedly using last-number redial, to get a GP appointment (Letters, 27 May). The surgery I attend introduced this system because of a high “no-show” rate for appointments booked in advance. Here in Nantwich we only have our fellow patients to blame. I support our GPs in their quest to be fair to all and to see as many patients as possible each day.
Annie Coombs
Nantwich, Cheshire
• Our St George’s mushrooms, which regularly appear before 23 April, did not show this year until 15 May, approximately a month late (Letters, 31 May).
Pat Ancliff
Derby
• Hypocrisy may be “eye-watering” (Letters, 31 May), but so are bankers’ bonuses. And they are always “trousered”. What do female bankers do?
Alan Hooper
Bexleyheath, Kent
• And why are “leaps” always “quantum”? It would come as a surprise to some to find out what its use really implies.
John Hunter
Cambridge

On Tuesday on ITN News Peter Davies, the UK’s leading police officer in the fight against online crimes against children, made a startling confession. He announced that Britain’s police are not able to arrest everyone they know is involved in downloading child abuse images (child pornography). He said he would like to but the police “do not have the capacity”. What an awful admission about a crime such as this (Investigators focus on the use of online child abuse images by killers, 31 May). No police force anywhere in the world has ever admitted in public what many insiders have known for some time. It is not Davies’s fault. He is speaking the truth as he sees it and it is better that this is out in the open than buried away. It must be all the more painful for Davies because he also knows that, aside from the crime they have already committed against the children depicted in the images they have downloaded, a proportion of these people he cannot arrest will go on to commit hands-on offences against their own or other people’s children. How has the internet industry allowed us to get to such an unpretty pass? They can and should do a lot more. I trust the home secretary will have words.
John Carr
London
• With regard to reining in internet service providers and social networks (We won’t co-operate with snooper’s charter, 31 May), all the UK has to do is bring forward a licensing system. This doesn’t necessarily mean the introduction of a “spectrum” fee, but it would mean the Home Office coming up with a charter to which companies would have to sign up.
Derek Wyatt
The Guardian is known for its fearless investigative journalism, but when it wrote a story about MPs benefiting from second incomes and led with a photograph of and caption about Gordon Brown, it fired at the wrong target. Mr Brown receives no second income: he receives only his MP’s salary, and he has renounced the ex-prime minister’s pension automatically paid to former PMs. All the money from speeches and writings goes to donations to outside charities, to charitable projects undertaken by his office and to his and Mrs Brown’s charitable and public service work. For complete transparency, all speeches and writings and their beneficiaries are declared in the Register of Members’ Interests with a declaration attached to each of them from Mr Brown stating, “I am not receiving any money from this engagement personally”.
Charlie King
Office of Gordon and Sarah Brown

You rightly conclude that the European commission’s giving more time to seven declining EU economies to reach their unchanged austerity targets, as Osborne has similarly for the UK, is a palliative, not a cure (Editorial, 30 May). It is astonishing, and tragic, that there continues to be no official momentum behind the necessary alternative of economic expansion, since current austerity policy is doomed when the budget deficit is growing because government tax receipts are falling faster than cuts being made in public expenditure.
There are two reasons for this refusal to face glaring reality. First, while the UK private sector is sitting on a cash mountain of £775bn and won’t invest till the prospect of growth makes their investment profitable, the public sector has the role of kickstarting the economy. But Osborne and fellow austerians won’t contemplate this because their western free market capitalism, which believes markets are infallible and the role of government is to get out of the way, holds that any such public intervention is taboo.
The other reason, an uncovenanted bonus for the Thatcherite right, is that the financial crash of 2008-09 gave them the chance they’d been waiting 70 years for to wind up our postwar social democracy and replace it by their ultimate objective: a fully market state. Since Osborne must know as well as anybody that his policy is utterly failing, the only rational reason he persists with it must be that it provides a cover for shrinking the state and minimising or eliminating the welfare safety net, and that task is not yet finished.
Michael Meacher MP
Labour, Oldham West and Royton
• I have been following your coverage of the financial manipulations of Google, Apple, Starbucks etc. I was struck by the firm, unguilty tone taken by Eric Schmidt of Google by saying he would pay tax if it was an amount suitable to him (Report, 27 May). It reminds me of the theme running through Ayn Rand’s book Atlas Shrugged. A group of very rich people decide that they are “carrying” the rest of the world and decide to “opt out”. The important thing to note and decide with these amoral beasts is don’t try to appeal to their better sides. They don’t have any. Just tax them.
William Vukmirovic
Wolverhampton
• The article by Ross McKibbin in the London Review of Books (25 April) should be read by all those who want to understand this government’s welfare policy. It details the deliberate misinformation relating to welfare expenditure (its distribution and recipients, where most people haven’t a clue as to where the money actually goes but accept the fairy tales of some tabloids). In McKibbin’s view, the real aim of the cuts is to turn the working class against itself. As he says: “It exploits a tendency in working-class life for people to distrust their own class more than they distrust the people above them.” This is not the first time the Tories have tried this – they did it with some success in the 30s. The misinformation and propaganda from Iain Duncan Smith are all part of this strategy.
The theses of some economists on debt levels is completely unfounded as is also their reasoning related to wealth effects. These are simply rebranding the old classical arguments, together with an ongoing belief that real wage cuts are the route to economic recovery.
Desmond Cohen
Brighton, East Sussex
• Whether borrowing more to expand the economy raises taxes long-term depends on many factors that Paul Negrotti and David Redshaw simplify (Letters, 30 May). But both letters ignore the problem of excess saving the UN Conference on Trade and Development has been discussing for years. As the treasuries of most high-wage nations know, these savings must be borrowed and spent preferably on new investments and on consumption, or else a slump. Why is this so often ignored? Redshaw may be right that Osborne will be known as the chancellor who grabbed defeat from the jaws of victory with austerity. But why Labour chose to hand power to the Tories and Lib Dems is more interesting and, I assume, something newspapers are unlikely to report either. But it hasn’t worked, has it?
George Talbot
Watford, Hertfordshire

In his article (Philosophy isn’t dead yet, 27 May) Raymond Tallis raises some important and difficult issues about the extent to which contemporary physics has largely parted company with philosophy, briefly dismissing the alternative view – espoused by Hawking etc – that it is philosophy that has died from failing to keep abreast with physics.
But occasionally peeping through his argument is the outline of a rather different version of the Hawking position, which suggests that philosophy is losing touch with physics not so much as a result of the obscure mathematical language deployed by physicists – as Tallis claims – but because of the unbelievable immensity and complexity of the reality emerging from the discoveries of physics (dark matter, black holes and so on). To put it crudely, it is becoming increasingly difficult to apply some of the basic concepts of traditional philosophy, including metaphysics, such as beginning and end, fixed identity, empiricism and even logic and truth, to the phenomena revealed by physics.
And increasingly, more ordinary notions/criteria such as “everyday experience”, the “reality of our world” and the nature of “our humanity” – variously invoked by Tallis in contrast to the obscure accounts projected by physicists – no longer seem to have the full capacity to carry us through the cosmological realities. This is not, I think, because physicists have lost the meaning of such terms, but because the sheer mystery and complexity of the worlds now being explored can no longer be fully captured, either by our comforting homespun philosophy or through the traditional language of ontology and epistemology.
I am not claiming that Dr Tallis is mistaken in stressing some of the communication failures of physics. Rather I would advocate that both sides, physicists and philosophers, admit their problems and then come together to construct a new dialogue to confront, explore and share the physical and metaphysical questions that divide them. In this way science and philosophy will unite, as once they did when Kant espoused Newton.
Martin Moir
London
• So Einstein mourned the fact that the present tense “now” lay “just outside the realm of science”. Locals in Lincolnshire often say “Now then”, followed by a profound pause, when meeting someone. When I first encountered this my consciousness was mystified when I tried to grapple with the meaning of the message my nerve impulses were transmitting. I had a hunch that I was on the edge of Deep Philosophy, and now Raymond Tallis confirms this was indeed the case.
Ivor Morgan
Lincoln

Independent:

Scientific research does support the decision to cull badgers to control TB in cattle (leading article, 31 May).
Analysis shows the negative effects of culling in the Randomised Badger Culling Trial disappeared within 18 months after the last cull and that there are lasting benefits up to six years later.
Reducing the size of the wildlife reservoir has led to the elimination of bovine TB as a problem in other countries.
We already use regular TB testing of cattle and slaughter of infected animals and strict cattle movement controls. In addition, considerable effort is being expended to develop usable cattle and badger vaccines. In spite of this, TB is relentlessly spreading through the countryside and we need to use all the tools available to us. The pilot culls will test whether a culling policy based upon experimental evidence can be turned in to one of those operational tools.
Those who do not want culling need to be clear about how they would tackle the disease. The currently available injectable badger vaccine is not a viable method of widespread control in England, and there is less evidence that it is effective at reducing TB in cattle than exists for culling.
Professor Ian Boyd, Chief Scientific Adviser, Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs, London SW1
 
The results of the badger culling experiment did not show that culling “only exacerbated the problem” as you state (leading article, 31 May). Within the cull areas, there was a substantial and sustained reduction in the incidence of disease on cattle farms, which lasted for some years longer than the culling programme itself.
Where things were more complicated was in the rim around the culling areas, where the incidence in cattle increased while badger culling was ongoing, but this increase was not sustained after culling ended. In the areas that are being trialled this year, the published calculations are that the overall benefits in reducing cattle disease outweigh the downsides.
What is absolutely clear is that badger culls will not work on their own, and efforts simultaneously to improve the control programme in cattle are equally important.  
James Wood, Alborada Professor of Equine and Farm Animal Science, University of Cambridge
 
The National Farmers Union is not leading the farming community to slaughter without giving the issue of a badger cull any debate (letter, 30 May). We support the Government’s policy to help control TB by using measures including rigorous TB testing for cattle, movement controls, and a cull of badgers in areas where TB is endemic.
The link between badgers, cattle and bovine TB has been proved beyond doubt. The disease is a massive risk to our cattle population and is out of control. Thousands of farmers are living with the threat of bovine TB hanging over their businesses and families and they need to see action.
Last year, 38,000 cattle were slaughtered because of this disease. There is no single solution, but the best scientific information, and the experience of other countries around the world, shows we need a multi-faceted approach. This includes tackling the disease in wildlife through targeted culling.
The idea that the two pilot culls are likely to eradicate badgers from many areas of England is completely wrong. The two culls will be carried out in specific areas, under licence, by trained professionals to ensure they are safe, effective and humane. Culls will only ever be carried out in areas where TB is endemic and will never be carried out nationwide.
Tom Hind, Director of Corporate Affairs, National Farmers’ Union, Stoneleigh Park, Warwickshire
 
Brutalist gem or barracks  in the sky?
I found Owen Hatherley’s nomination of the Brownfield Estate in Poplar as one of London’s “architectural gems” (“The beauty of bus depots”, 30 May) quite revealing. Why did he choose that development and not the much finer Lansbury estate a little further west? I imagine that what prompted the nomination was the estate’s proximity to Erno Goldfinger’s Balfron Tower. 
Balfron Tower is an icon to the architectural establishment but it isn’t to me. As a teenager I watched it going up at the end of my street. My family and our neighbours dreaded the prospect of being sent there under the slum clearance scheme. We called it “the Barracks” and it became a symbol of the threat to our community.
We wanted houses; no one wanted a flat, especially in Goldfinger’s gruesome tower. Where would children play? What happens when the lifts break down? Who would be looking out when criminals came by?
Nobody listened to us because idealists like Goldfinger knew best. The fact that my father kept a garden in our back yard, that our neighbours raced pigeons and others had dogs meant nothing.
We pleaded to be given a house on the Lansbury Estate but were refused. Eventually we gave up trying to stay in Poplar and were rehoused in Essex, although we didn’t want to go.  
Goldfinger lived for a few months in his tower and declared it a great success. An urban motorway was cut through what remained of the street below, and with that a good community in east London was lost for ever.
When identifying gems, it would be wise to remember that architecture is a process just as much as it is a product.
Joe Connolly
Bishops’ Stortford, Hertfordshire
 
Media circus at a gay wedding
I’m a gay man, and fully in favour of same-sex marriage.
But I’d have a lot more respect for France’s first gay marriage if they’d done it quietly like a proper wedding instead of inviting 150 journalists and turning it into a media freak show (report, 30 May). The younger groom looked distinctly uncomfortable with all the posturing.
It always annoys me when equality isn’t enough. The gobbier members of the “gay community” (whatever that is supposed to be) over here spend so much time and energy campaigning that they don’t realise they’re putting people off.
The battle had been won. It was bad form to stamp the defeated’s head into the ground.
Paul Harper, London E15
 
Victims can’t  prevent rape
By employing his Sarajevo sniper analogy, Philip Anthony (letter, 30 May) implies that women and men are at war. Perhaps Mr Anthony would now define “taking responsibility” in a non-battle context. How do potential rape victims, young and old, male and female, ensure that they are not irresponsibly bringing about their own rape?
Many instances of rape occur in a domestic setting – what is the irresponsible behaviour being condemned there? Simply being female seems to be enough.
The burka aside, how do we avert this unpredictable danger? Our most mature and constructive response to the crisis of rape must include interrogating those smug, thoughtlessly sexist beliefs which suggest that rape victims bring rape upon themselves.
Karen Jones, London SW19
 
Cheap justice for the poor
May I remind your readers that they have until 4 June to register a protest at the cuts and “reforms” of legal aid being pushed through by the Ministry of Justice.
Under Chris Grayling’s price-competitive tendering system we stand to lose our small high-street solicitor firms who know the problems of their clients, and find in their place big multiple-contract operators who, no doubt attracted by the prospect of fixed fees and minimum outlay, will use overworked, underpaid and inexperienced paralegals to represent some of the most vulnerable in society. No longer will those who cannot afford to go private have any choice over their access to justice.
The estimated saving – under £220m by 2018 – takes no account of the solicitors and support staff who will be made unemployed and is fairly paltry when set against the huge amounts escaping the national coffers in tax evasion.
Alan J Fisher, Finstock, Oxfordshire
 
Get paedophile porn off the net
After the murder of April Jones by the paedophile Mark Bridger it was found that Bridger was obsessed with images of kids being sexually abused, storing foul pornography on his laptop. Governments worldwide must unite and force the internet to remove any filth, not just extreme, which must fuel such deranged desires.
David Cameron and other politicians make the point that they are family men. Now for the sake of the family of April Jones they must act with urgency so that her death will not be in vain.
John Connor, Dunfermline, Fife
 
Medical mystery
Further to Grace Dent’s column (30 May), can anyone with medical training please explain, in simple terms, why it should not be a matter of national outrage that a British hospital has seen fit to discharge a patient who still has drains inserted in a wound following surgery? Words fail me.
Jennifer Phipps, Cardington, Bedfordshire
 
Act of equality
David Keating wonders, if the word “actress” is deleted, what would happen to Best Actress awards (Letter, 30 May). Perhaps they could be renamed, “Best Actor – Female”.
Keith O’Neill, Shrewsbury
 
If “actress” and other gender-defined titles are to be discarded, what will the Queen have to call herself?
Michael O’Hare, Northwood, Middlesex
 
Age of rockers
Can I thank Mick Jagger for restricting or even banning the BBC from broadcasting coverage of the Rolling Stones’ performance at Glastonbury. There is plenty of footage of the real Rolling Stones on YouTube rather than this awful tribute band he continues to hawk round the stadiums of the world charging ridiculous ticket prices.
Tim Johnson, Wakefield, West Yorkshire
 
Dizzy spell
In spite of what Professor Simon Horobin says, spelling is important. Today I received an email about someone’s gardening progress this year; he said that he had taken a gambol with his courgettes. The mind boggles.
Sigrid Stamm, Lympstone, Devon

Times:

The reason for closing down swimming pools is that they are expensive to maintain — unless you’re lucky enough to live near a beach
Sir, I have been a teacher in a small Peterborough primary school for the past 37 years. Over that time it has been my job to maintain our small, but extremely popular, swimming pool (“Pupils floundering as schools skimp on swimming lessons”, May 23, and letters, May 29).
Over those years I have had the privilege to work with headteachers who have ringfenced funds to keep the pool open. As a result we are one of a handful of schools in the area to still have a pool.
Now 95 per cent of our children can swim when they leave our primary school. I find this “Health and Safety diktat” a feeble excuse to close pools. In my mind the real reason for the closure of swimming pools is a money-saving exercise, because they are extremely expensive to maintain.
For most of our children this is the only opportunity they will have to learn to swim, and long may it continue.
Martin Pearce
Stilton, Cambs
Sir, Lin Corker expects parents to teach their children how to swim (letter, May 29). How quaint. Schools are now responsible for all aspects of a child’s development, from potty training to reminding parents to apply for a place at secondary school for their dear child. Many parents are far too busy to bother with such minor details.
Helen Edwards
London SW20
Sir, The question why it is the job of schools to teach children to swim is one I have asked on seeing our leisure centre pool hosting visits from schools.
The answer given by professionals at both the pool and the school end of this arrangement is that it is an extremely good “resource”. It fulfils the requirement to include sport/exercise, it does so for large groups of children, and with little demand on teacher time.
Norman Harris
Allendale, Northumberland
Sir, The only swimming lessons I received were by radio. When I was young one of the “uncles” on Children’s Hour described the arm and leg movements used in the various swimming strokes and we practised breathing exercises in the bathroom with a bowl or basin full of water. I never looked back.
Roy Hyde
Cheltenham, Glos
Sir, I agree entirely with David Rooney (letter, May 29) — my daughter learnt swimming at her school pool in the 1980s.
It should be pointed out (yet again) that the Health and Safety Executive was not set up to close down school swimming pools, or for that matter to issue the myriad other diktats to “preserve” our well-being. The HSE came from the Factory Inspectorate whose job was to keep check on the poor safety conditions in the workplace and in the building industry. It has simply grown out of all proportions to the extremely powerful body it is today.
Colin Round
Retired architectural technologist
Stourport-on-Severn, Worcs
Sir, Swimming pools — who needs them? As wartime schoolboys we were marched a mile to the nearest beach where we passed through the barbed wired defences, changed on the beach and non-swimmers were hauled through the surf at the end of a rope. We learnt quickly.
Derek Sowell
Durham

The river frontage would make a superb setting for a new modern building for our members of parliament to work from
Sir, Why are we so obsessed with preserving buildings that are no longer fit for purpose? Is Unesco not open to persuasion? Westminster does not lack heritage buildings. Why not demolish the Palace of Westminster and replace it with a modern, well-designed building with up-to-date debating chambers, good seating, a robust electronic voting system and offices suitable for the considerable amount of work which we expect our MPs to do? The river frontage would make a superb setting for a fine new building; there are several architectural practices with the vision and ability to undertake the work. Let us for once look forwards with confidence rather than backwards with nostalgia.
R. J. Guy
Great Malvern, Worcs

Perhaps the Government should reconsider plans to privatise the courts in light of what the Magna Carta has to say on the matter
Sir, As a barrister I too am troubled by the prospect of privatised courts. Professor Francis (letter, May 31) is right in saying that feudalism had a few drawbacks. Magna Carta sought to remove them. Cl. 30 of Magna Carta states “to no one will we sell, to no one deny or delay right or justice.”
Perhaps the Government might reconsider its plans to privatise the courts in the light of this principle and in the shadow of the 800th anniversary of that Charter.
Andrew Francis
London WC2

‘Editors, who would never send an engineer to interview the Poet Laureate, think nothing of sending someone with an arts degree to interview a physicist’
Sir, Scientists wish to bypass traditional media and use the new website The Conversation (report, May 29, and letters, May 30 & 31) because they have found from experience that most journalists are so ignorant of anything technical that the reports they write are highly misleading and full of mistakes. Editors, who would never send an engineer to interview the Poet Laureate, think nothing of sending someone with an arts degree to interview a physicist.
The idea that these journalists can “interpret” the science for the “layman” is nonsense. Although in most of the subjects covered by the media the journalist has expertise between the expert and the reader, this is not true of scientific topics. Half of our graduates have science degrees, and many readers who do not are engaged in highly technical jobs. Furthermore the stories are rarely controversial — the only reason the scientists wish to edit the final version is to correct the mistakes.
We should give every support to this new venture, and so should the Science Media Centre.
Archie Campbell
Emeritus Professor of Electromagnetism, Cambridge

There may be different reasons why so few people have taken up a Green Deal loan — and a lack of follow-up may be one
Sir, You report (May 29) that few people have taken up a Green Deal loan, but that 18,000 have had home assessments under the scheme. As one of those 18,000 I am not surprised at the paltry uptake. It seems to be nigh impossible to persuade a Green Deal provider to follow up on an assessment, visit and quote for work suggested by the said assessment. My attempts to persuade providers to visit are rebuffed by multiple excuses.
You cannot, as you do in your report, claim that householders are trying to torpedo the Government’s energy efficiency drive — the Government’s own scheme is doing a very good job of that itself.
Rob Mackay
Gloucester

Telegraph:

SIR – I wonder if I am one of the few remaining persons to have met all the members of the Everest expedition of 1953 (report, May 25).
When they left Kathmandu they came to New Delhi and the acting High Commissioner gave a reception for them on June 30. I still have my invitation card. As well as every member of the team, I also met Tensing’s wife and daughters.
Of course the team had not packed dinner suits in their kit and so the call went out for the loan of dinner jackets and trousers for them. They were arrayed that night in a mixture of black and white jackets and trousers in most combinations.
I cannot remember what I wore but it was probably the dress I made for the reception for the Coronation. I still have a photograph of that.
Nancy Hand
Fetcham, Surrey

SIR – Bishop Holtam (report, May 30) appears to be quite ready to set aside what has been a fundamental bedrock for society and substitute instead his own “reasoned experience”.
But it is precisely because a sizeable proportion of practising Christians mistrust the reasoned experience of today’s politicians – who appear to have scant regard for this country’s Christian heritage and principles in their pursuit of “the development of societal aims” – that they are extremely wary of accepting that the redefinition of marriage is either right or desirable.
Rev Anthony Durkin
Sherborne, Dorset
SIR – The Bishop of Salisbury suggests that not allowing same-sex couples to marry is discriminatory. However, the Government’s completely new definition of marriage for same-sex couples will not be exclusive, since it cannot be based on the sex act, and cannot be dissolved in the case of infidelity. The European Court of Human Rights may find that heterosexual couples are being discriminated against for having to remain faithful to each other. Far from being enhanced, traditional marriage is in danger of being redefined out of existence.
Ann Farmer
Woodford Green, Essex
Related Articles
Remembering the first conquerors of Everest
31 May 2013
SIR – It was the dissenting churches that opposed slavery and Apartheid, not the state church. The Church of England is legally obliged to marry people in their parish and therefore has a lower standard – many people only ever enter their church to get married or for their funeral.
Geraldine Lee
Norwich, Norfolk
SIR – Apartheid South Africa denied basic human rights to the vast majority of the population, terrorising them and oppressing them. In Britain, a tiny minority of people, who already have the full panoply of human rights enjoyed by the majority, are determined to annex to themselves the institution of marriage, despite already having, in civil partnerships, all that marriage affords.
Margaret Robinson
London SE9
SIR – Christians before Wilberforce did not see slavery as part of a God-given order of creation. This might have been true for the Anglican Church, but popes have condemned it from the 15th century.
Pope Eugenius IV in his bull Sicut Dudum in 1435 opposed Portuguese enslavement of the Canary Islanders 60 years before Columbus crossed the Atlantic. Philip II forbade the taking of slaves whether by just or unjust war in the Philippines.
Even earlier, we have in our own country St Wulfstan, Bishop of Worcester from 1062, who campaigned vigorously against the slave trade based in Bristol.
Dr John A Fannon
Weymouth, Dorset
Benefits for migrants
SIR – EU insistence that we pay UK benefits to migrants (“Brussels takes Britain to EU court over immigrant benefits”, telegraph.co.uk, May 30), is reported to stem from a 1994 agreement.
Tory policy has been to be a member of a free-trade EU, not a single-state EU. Free trade is free movement of goods, not free movement of people, and certainly not common benefits systems. So why did John Major, the prime minister at the time, agree to this?
Perhaps the Tories do really seek a single-state EU but know they must proceed by lying to the British public.
John Allison
Maidenhead, Berkshire
SIR – To reduce the burden of benefit tourism on EU member states, perhaps any benefit paid to an EU claimant should be financed by the recipient’s home country as declared on their passport.
This would allow member states to stipulate how much benefit, and for how long, they are prepared to pay to nationals. It would also ensure that unauthorised immigrants could not obtain benefits.
Paul Gilbert
Knowle, Warwickshire
SIR – Have we considered taking the EU to court over its failure to produce audited accounts for the past 18 years?
Michael Allisstone
Chichester, West Sussex
Global warming
SIR – In your report on global warming (“Yeo: climate change may not be man-made”, May 30), you quote a survey which shows that 97 per cent of academic papers agree that human activities are causing the planet to warm. They would, wouldn’t they?
Funding for this research is based on the premise that the scientists involved can do something about climate change. As long as the fund-holders are being told that science can put a stop to global warming, they will continue to provide them with our money. If we are to spend at a time like this, let us concentrate on finding the best ways to cope with the expected conditions, rather than behaving like a bunch of King Canutes.
John Palmer
Wellington, Herefordshire
SIR – It is not true that 97 per cent of academic papers supported the Anthropogenic Global Warming (AGW) theory. Around 32 per cent of papers endorsed AGW while around 66 per cent stated no position for or against AGW.
To add these two numbers together is fraudulent.
Christopher Wright
Findon, West Sussex
SIR – If humans may not be responsible for global warming will the Government then consider repaying the public for carbon emission taxes?
Thorvald Peterson
Weisdale, Shetland
Belt up
SIR – Roger Crawshaw (Letters, May 29) asks what should he wear as a Renault Kangoo owner to avoid attracting the attention of the police.
A seat belt would be a good start.
David Robinson
Wiveliscombe, Somerset
Tobacco packaging
SIR – Further to your report that the Republic of Ireland is planning to introduce the plain packaging of tobacco (report, May 29), there is still no credible evidence linking tobacco packaging with children taking up smoking. The actual evidence suggests that those children who take up smoking do so because of the influence of peer pressure or family members who smoke.
As a responsible local retailer, I support every sensible approach to deter youngsters from smoking. These include: the existing proof-of-age registration schemes such as CitizenCard; outlawing the proxy purchasing of cigarettes in England, Wales and Northern Ireland, as in Scotland; giving more resources to our hard-pressed enforcement agencies; and stiffening the penalties for criminals involved in counterfeiting and smuggling.
Plain packaging would make it much easier to fake the packs and attract new criminals into the market who currently do not have the expertise to counterfeit the complicated existing packs. These criminals think nothing of offering their illegal tobacco to young people – the very people we are all trying to protect.
Cracking down on the criminals who sell illicit tobacco in our communities would be a more effective way of preventing children’s access to tobacco, as well as supporting local retailers.
Debbie Corris
The Tobacco Retailers’ Alliance
London SW1
Spelling trouble
SIR – You report from the Hay Festival (May 29) that an Oxford professor, Simon Horobin, has said that people do not need to spell accurately or use correct grammar and punctuation.
Without consistent spellings, the meaning can be completely altered. It matters whether someone was rapping or raping, and whether more mating or more matting is needed in the bedroom.
Affected (influenced) and effected (brought to completion) are quite different.
Similarly, punctuation can be the key to the meaning of a sentence. Ungrammatical English has spoiled many CVs and job applications.
If the professor thinks that Middle English was “comparatively recent” in our language, his history also seems faulty. He should listen to the appeals from employers for more literate graduates and school-leavers.
Dr Bernard Lamb
President of the Queen’s English Society London SW14
We need a cheaper, more efficient justice system
SIR – The body of Queen’s Counsel protesting in your paper over the restriction of legal aid (Letters, May 29) would reap more sympathy were they to co-operate in making our justice system more efficient, and less demanding of the public purse.
A large reduction in their fees would be a considerable help, as would the eradication of practices such as repeated appeals and delaying tactics in such cases as the deportation of persons deemed to be a risk to our society.
David Broughton
Woodborough, Wiltshire
SIR – Having read the pleading letter from a number of lawyers, my reaction is at least the Government is doing something right.
Dr John Bennett
Newick, East Sussex
SIR – The concern raised by the QCs over the reduction of legal aid has more to do with the loss of income their profession makes from this gravy train, than undermining the rule of law.
Gary P Butler
Chippenham, Wiltshire
SIR – It is bizarre that 90 QCs should demand that the Government pays huge sums of taxpayers’ money to lawyers to challenge the decisions of Government.
What is at stake here is not the rule of law, but the rule of lawyers. Law is best made by a democratically elected Parliament, not unelected judges.
Nigel Foster
East Cowes, Isle of Wight
SIR – If the number of judicial review cases is as limited as the 90 QCs claim in their letter, I trust that we will see them taking these cases on a pro bono basis until they can convince this or a future government to change the law.
Niall Garvie
Bromley, Kent

Irish Times:

Sir, – Much of the discussion following RTÉ’s ‘Breach of Trust’ programme has focused on the need for creches to have qualified staff. This is, of course, extremely important, however, what is more important than having a full complement of such staff is to have good managers. Even where there are some unqualified staff, if they are well managed no harm need come to any child. That means high standards, good supervision and the consistent application of sound child- care principles. Staff who lack qualifications can learn if well supervised and guided.
The key failure in this instance was at management level: both the micro-management in the centres but also the macro-management required of the HSE and the policy-makers in Government departments. This is hardly surprising when one considers that many of our creches were built during the “boom” years in response to the need to facilitate women, in particular, to work. At one point this drive was overseen by the Department of Justice – a very curious decision indeed – with a range of grants and tax-breaks for those who opened facilities.
The subsequent failure to adequately regulate the tax-incentive-driven childcare sector is a carbon copy of failure to regulate the tax-incentive-driven construction industry, which has led to the virtual collapse of the economy.
If this current controversy prompts a real rethink of our approach to childcare some good will have come from it. However, history would suggest that our capacity to learn is very limited. – Yours, etc,
KIERAN McGRATH,

Sir, – Several contributors to the debate on the future of the Seanad have called the system by which it is elected “undemocratic”. I beg to differ.
Indirect election by an electoral college is an acceptable form of democracy, especially when the members of the college are themselves elected by universal suffrage. Most Senators (43 out of 60) are elected in this way, the college consisting of elected local authority councillors, plus TDs and outgoing Senators.
A further six members are elected by graduates of two universities. Recognising the academic and financial efforts that students have to make to achieve graduation, as well as the State’s own contribution to costs (which means that third-level education is now accessible to many more adults, whether young or “mature”), the State is entitled to “reward” with the right to vote those who have increased their value to society by graduating. (The two universities would do well, however, to open their voters’ rolls to diploma-holders and senior students).
The main flaw in the system is that not all third-level institutions qualify. To correct this without taking seats away from the older universities (as an unused section of the Constitution foresees) the government could offer, say, four or five of the 11 seats that it now fills by appointment to be voted for by the graduates and senior students of the excluded institutions. – Yours, etc,
MICHAEL DRURY,

Sir, – Nora Scott (May 30th) eloquently described her harrowing evening stroll on Dublin’s O’Connell Street. Unfortunately, but not surprisingly, she encountered various displays of anti-social behaviour, some of which were violent and made her feel threatened. Needless to say her unpleasant experience has become the norm in centre city Dublin, exposing numerous citizens and visitors alike to a vile and uncivil atmosphere.
I can remember 40 years ago when I was residing on Pembroke Road. I was a young lad from down the country who enthusiastically trod the streets of Dublin on a daily basis seeking out fabulous works of architecture, meeting inspirational characters and feeling the various vibrations of the very soul of the Old Smoke. Never once in my day and night explorations did I see violence or other serious activities. Certainly, there were the over-imbibers meandering along from time to time, but they went on their way with the odd tip of the cap and I went mine, rarely a word exchanged.
At the end of her letter Ms Scott asks: As a citizen of Dublin haven’t I got the right to walk the streets without fear? In answer to the question I have to ask an important question of the leaders of this country: When did the ordinary citizen, accosted by thugs on the streets of Ireland, simply become unheard and unseen entities in the human drama of good versus evil while the criminals were cast in the role of the victims? – Yours, etc,
EDWARD D RAFFERTY,

Sir, – Constable James O’Brien cannot be the first man to die in the Rising (Colm Keena, Stories from the Revolution, May 22nd).
It is believed that the first deaths connected with the Rising were those in Killorglin on Good Friday night of 1916 when three Volunteers (Con Keating, Charlie Monahan and Donal Sheehan) were drowned. Their car, on its way to Cahersiveen/Valentia to seize radio equipment to secure contact with the Aud carrying arms and ammunition, went over the pier at Ballykissane.
Only the driver, Thomas McInerney was saved by a local resident Timothy O’Sullivan. – Yours, etc,
SEÁN Ó SÚILLEABHÁIN,
Foilnagowe

Irish Independent:

* In light of the current revelations of the sub-standard practices of some childcare providers in Ireland, I feel I have to write this letter to you. Firstly, I would like to say that I am delighted that this investigation has exposed the failings in certain childcare settings. It is high time that parents and the wider society began to examine the environment our children are in on a daily basis for almost nine or 10 hours. As a working practitioner, I was never questioned on my qualifications by parents. It was just “accepted”.
Also in this section
A moving poem that every parent should read
Nobody listening as families drown in debt
Let’s dispense with the fig-leaf of discretion
As an early years practitioner with a BA in Early Childhood Care and Education – and given that I’m currently completing an MA in Education – I feel that the childcare system in Ireland is not valued. In comparison with our European counterparts, we lack support from governmental and managerial levels. There is not enough emphasis on qualifications.
The Childcare Preschool Regulations 2006 only insist on a minimum level of standards regarding development, physical, social and emotional. In the primary school sector, a degree is the minimum qualification deemed acceptable, why not in early childhood education?
Childcare providers, especially in the private sector, are free to employ staff with the minimum level of qualifications to meet the job description, which is currently a minimum FETAC Level 5 in Childcare Studies. But people cannot be adequately trained in the appropriate child development and child psychology to control various child behaviours in just nine months.
Children are a precious commodity and education in early years should be a priority for our legislators. At the very minimum, childcare practitioners should have attained a degree in early education and childcare.
The abusive nature highlighted in the programme aired on Tuesday night was not surprising to me. In many settings, practitioners are overworked, undervalued and underpaid.
However, this does not excuse the behaviour. International research has shown that the years 0-6 are the most formative of a child’s education. We need action not words and empty promises from our government.
Natalie Walsh
Charlestown, Co Mayo
GOVERNED BY COMICS
* So the Shatter saga goes on, while our country is sliding into oblivion, all we hear is he said this, and he said that, and we’re still no nearer to getting to the truth once and for all.
The simple solution to the Shatter saga is let Mr Shatter ask his pal the garda commissioner to question the garda who stopped Mr Shatter that night and in turn to submit a report on all that happened – it couldn’t be all that difficult.
Any filmmaker looking for actors for their next comedy blockbuster could do worse than have a look at our government frontbench.
We must be the greatest little country in the world being governed by a bunch of comedians.
Fred Molloy
Clonsilla, Dublin 15
CAR FOR THE COURSE
* What’s the difference between my 2000 Toyota Corolla and creches in Ireland? My car is inspected every 12 months.
Kevin Devitte
Mill Street, Westport, Co Mayo
APPALLED WITH HANAFIN
* Des Hanafin is appalled that the new bill has been referred to as the “Pro-Life” bill.
Well I’ve been appalled for years that his organisation is called the “Pro-Life” Campaign.
They have no views on “Life”, only views on being born. If that is at the cost of the mother’s “life” then so be it.
Life is a wonderful gift. It is the job of our society to make it so for every child born in Ireland.
This includes protecting the mothers who often make it so.
This is the meaning of Pro-Life.
And I believe it’s the best way of saving the lives of the unborn that Mr Hanafin cares so deeply about.
Pauline Bleach
Wolli Creek, NSW, Australia
THE WRONG MESSAGE
* Most Dublin citizens are aware our city council has removed all of Dublin’s public toilets, citing the usual catch-all excuse of antisocial behaviour.
Now we learn that the government is looking to install drug injection rooms with toilets for the city’s addicts. Are the authorities really suggesting the only way you can be permitted to use a public convenience is if you become a heroin addict?
John Devlin
Erne Tce, Dublin 2
CRITIC NEEDS TO GROW UP
* It would appear that your radio ‘critic’ Darragh McManus has cranked up his regular Saturday morning column. He appears on the the same page as John Boland your TV critic (who is always worth reading). Last Saturday he criticised those who claim that there is a bias in the media against Catholics and then went on to slate everything about this faith. This was choice stuff.
In a previous column, which I found to be morally reprehensible and offensive, he claimed that ‘pro-life’ was a ‘nonsensical’ name and asked “who besides Satan and serial killers are anti-life”.
He might take a leaf from the great Con Houlihan. He always cast aside his bias in his column as he believed in balance and fairness. When comparing the old local town and Dublin reporters, he said: “As soon as a young pup sees his name in print he reckons he’s made it.”
John Burke
Clontarf, Dublin 3
BOOMTIME SNOBS
* One must pose the question why did people get into so much debt, and others not. During the Celtic Tiger years some people lived like the contrived property boom was going to last forever. I remember vividly snooty people walking past me, with their head in the air, and refusing to look at me, as if I was a piece of dirt. Just because I wouldn’t act like a proud peacock living on borrowed money.
No four holidays a year for me. No weekends shopping in New York for a handbag. No third home in Bulgaria. No fancy dinners out. No designer clothes. No wallet full of credit cards. No six bank loans on the go. No sending the kids to private schools.
For me, I was just satisfied to do my job, and live on my wages, and pay off the mortgage on my old house.
Now those same people who didn’t want to know me, when they were running amok, with big ideas, expect me to pay for their good times, which I had no hand, act or part in.
Anthony Woods
Ennis, Co Clare
MATTER OF DIPLOMACY
* In my opinion piece in yesterday’s paper, I explained how the Danish political system works with just one chamber in our parliament and a strong local government. Some of my words were picked up by your deputy political editor without my knowledge and I would like to underline that nothing I said in my piece should be construed as support for those who want to abolish the Seanad here.
I want to make it clear that while I follow and respect the Irish debate I have no wish to be seen as taking part in it.
Niels Pultz
Danish Ambassador to Ireland
Irish Independent


At home

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At home 2nd June 2013

I trot round the park today and listen to the Navy lark. I Oh dear, oh dear
Pertwee is in trouble again a hundred and twenty navy blankets have mysteriously gone missing. Has he done a deal with the local draper? Priceless.
A quiet day off out to the post office a nice day but we are both very tired.
We watch Genevieve s a wonderful old film
I win at Scrabble today, just and gets just under 400, Mary might get her revenge tomorrow, I hope.

Obituary:

Leonard ‘Rover’ Reynolds
Leonard ‘Rover’ Reynolds, who has died aged 89, served during the war in Motor Gunboat 658 in the Mediterranean, and later became a headmaster.

Leonard ‘Rover’ Reynolds 
6:37PM BST 30 May 2013
Reynolds joined the Royal Navy in 1942 and was commissioned into the RNVR, serving in MGB 658 for the rest of the war, first as navigating officer, then as first-lieutenant before being given command at the early age of 21.
On June 2 1943, MGB 658 arrived in Malta as the Allies were preparing to invade Sicily. Reynolds and his inexperienced crew carried out 14 patrols in 19 days, and during the landings in July blockaded the Messina Strait to prevent attack by German E-boats.
Later, in 1944, as the Allied advance slowed to a near halt in the bitter fighting between Naples and Rome, MGB 658 conducted dummy landings near Civita-Vecchia to distract the enemy, and also escorted to Elba the Free French landing forces under General Latte de Tassigny.
Then, while on patrol in heavy rain and low visibility in the Piombino Channel on the night of July 18 1944, MGB 658 was surprised by an Italian destroyer . MGB 658 was last in a line of five boats as the destroyer appeared out of the darkness and tried to ram. Reynolds was in the gunnery control position as a salvo ripped into the gunboat’s bridge; the seaman behind him was hit by a shell . When Reynolds looked around he saw the captain and two ratings sitting or lying on deck, either wounded or dead, and the steering wheel entangled with wires from the fallen mast. Also, one of the gunners had been killed and two others seriously wounded.
Reynolds assumed command and single-handedly cleared the wreckage around the steering wheel; removed a corpse which was in the way; and made the wounded as comfortable as possible, while steering MTB 658 into Bastia in Corsica.
Later, from a base at the island of Vis in the Adriatic, Reynolds took part in clandestine operations among enemy-occupied islands, seeing many friends and their boats blown up by mines.
In three years of war, MGB 658 sank or damaged more than 26 enemy craft. Reynolds was awarded a DSC, and her crew of three officers and 30 ratings were between them awarded four more DSCs, five DSMs and were mentioned in despatches eight times.
Leonard Charles Reynolds was born on June 29 1923, the son of a London policeman, and grew up at Wallington, Surrey, being educated at the local grammar school. On the outbreak of war he joined Sun Life Insurance, which was evacuated to Wrest Park in Bedfordshire .
After the war he gained a teaching certificate and returned to his old school while studying at night for a degree at Birkbeck College, London. After a spell at Chatham and Clarendon Grammar School in Ramsgate, in 1960 he was appointed headmaster of Kendal Grammar School. From 1965 to 1981 he was head of Maidenhead Grammar School (later Desborough comprehensive). He served as chairman of the Berkshire Association of Secondary Heads.
Reynolds was also a JP; an active Rotary member; and a keen supporter of Maidenhead Arts Council. He was a Deputy Lieutenant of Berkshire from 1978.
For more than 30 years Reynolds was on the Admiralty Interview Board, which vets potential officers, thus helping to shape the Royal Navy and Royal Marines officer corps .
Reynolds lived life by the Scout law which he had learned as a boy, and was a scout master of four troops. In 1980 he was awarded the Silver Wolf (the Scout Association’s highest award), and in 1981 was appointed OBE for services to the movement. His nickname “Rover” was coined when he attended a meeting of Deep Sea Scouts in wartime Malta.
He was the author of Motor Gunboat 658: the Small Boat War in the Mediterranean, which has not been out of print since 1955, and in retirement wrote three books which form the definitive history of coastal forces in the Second World War.
He married, in 1946, Win Darbyshire, who survives him with their son and daughter.
Leonard “Rover” Reynolds, born June 29 1923, died April 18 2013

Guardian:

Jay Rayner was aware that he was opening himself up to criticism (“Why worrying about food miles is missing the point”, Magazine). I welcome his support of the notion that the sustainability debate is often over-simplified and narrowly considered, but he himself misses the point, in dismissing the influence of food miles on sustainability, by framing the argument around New Zealand lamb. The UN is just one of many international bodies that claims the only way to feed the world sustainably is to move to a meat-free diet.
Just as the vast majority of commentators have been guilty of ignoring this point of view, Rayner is arguing over details at the wrong end of the debate. Excluding meat from, or at the very least drastically reducing the amount of meat in, our diets is the one simple thing we can be quite sure would have a dramatic impact on food security and sustainability.
When will this be discussed in the food sections of our newspapers?
Anthony Powis
Milton Keynes
Jay Rayner cites nitrogen fertilisers and heated greenhouses as reasons why local food is not always better. Both of these examples are just as reliant on petrochemicals as transportation; however, neither of these is necessarily part of a sustainable, local food system.
Last year, Organiclea, a workers’ co-op based in north-east London, grew more than a tonne of salad leaves outdoors and in an unheated greenhouse. As a perishable crop, there are huge benefits in taste, nutrition and reduced wastage to producing salad within the city limits. For our veg box scheme and market stalls, we support other organic farmers outside London by buying their potatoes.
Rayner raises a good point – that neither local nor organic is automatically the most sustainable option in isolation to each other – but fails to develop it or offer any solutions.
More food can be grown locally in the UK and good farming practices can, through carbon sequestration in the soil, be genuinely carbon neutral without resorting to buying offsetting credits as most “carbon neutral” businesses do.
Jo Clarke
Organiclea
London E4
I wonder how many people live near places where food is produced? Where food production is local, buyers can see where it comes from and how it is grown, maybe get to know farmers personally, and money spent stays and circulates in the locality. The big operators take their profits away to headquarters, maybe a tax haven, and the only money left locally is staff wages.
Robin Minney
Durham
Support for better food supplies should be the focus for improved food security. Such supplies must be affordable, available, sufficient and sustainable. They must not dig up, chop down, pollute or overheat the planet, nor must they open the way for other human activities to do so; the potential benefits of more food with less impact could sadly still be outweighed elsewhere by the impact of providing western lifestyles for a growing human population.
The good news is that there are many improvements in food supplies including hi-tech approaches and simple ideas, such as less waste. The bad news is that nobody, especially in the wealthy west, wants the bill, the job or to have their consumer choice affected.
Iain Climie
Whitchurch
Hants
Thank you for publishing Jay Rayner’s article “Death in the afternoon”. I’m a daughter and granddaughter of butchers and, as such, a vegetarian. Reading the piece, feeling weary during a tea break, gave me the determination to finish my shift in the busy Quorn packing hall where, thankfully, unlike Jay, I did not have to regulate my breathing to deal with the sensory overload.
Fiona Smeaton Papiez
Stokesley
North Yorkshire

If the economic answer to developing better performing businesses is skilled and capable women working alongside equally talented men, then it is time that these women stand up and be counted; that they take some responsibility for the issue of the under-representation of women at the top of corporate Britain.
Everyone has been looking to chairmen, chief executives, politicians and head hunters to ensure that more talented women reach the top levels. Until now, there has been no push on what we, the women, can do to support and address this serious issue.
The Two Percent Club, “the voice of corporate women”, resolves to support companies, their leaders and their aspiring female talent to achieve better-balanced businesses. We believe that the problem is threefold:
• The issue lies not in the boardroom, but the talent pipeline.
• This is a business issue, not just a FTSE 100 issue.
• Women are not blameless in this.
As skilled, capable and successful women, we pledge to work together to create sustainable progress for better balanced business.
Heather Jackson, founder; Linda Pollard, national chair; Liz Bingham, Ernst & Young; Judith Moreton, Little Blue Private Jets; Helen Ridge, Pinsent Masons; Helen Cook,
RBS
Karen Caddick, Senior HR Professional
Natalie Ceeney, CEO, Financial Ombudsman
Pat Chapman-Pincher, Chairman, The Cavell Group
Carrie Hindmarsh, CEO, M&C Saatchi
Julie Nerney, Portfolio Career
Helen Rosethorn, CEO, Bernard Hodes Group UK
Carla Stent, Partner & COO, Virgin Management
Caroline Rainbird, Director of Corporate Services, RBS
Jayne Hussey, Partner, Pinsent Masons
Fiona Penhallurick, Managing Director, Covanta Energy
Andrew Harrison, Managing Director, Midlands & East of England, RBS
Joëlle Warren, Deputy Chair of The Two Percent Club, North West and Executive Chairman, Warren Partners
Catherine Fairhurst, Partner, Ernst & Young
Vanda Murray OBE, Portfolio Career
Caroline Shaw, CEO, Christie NHS Foundation
Angela Spindler, CEO, The Original Factory Shop
Richard Topliss, MD, Corporate & Institutional Banking, RBS
Norma Corlette, Director, Communities Online
Caroline Donaldson, Director, Kynesis Coaching
Susan Forrester, Audit Partner, Deloitte
Angela Mitchell, Lead Partner for the Scottish Public Sector, Deloitte
Charles McGarry, Director, Warren Partners
Blame poverty for extremism
The root of the current reasons why young adults are turning to extremist opinions is not related to geography, ethnicity or religion (“What made two gang members turn to jihad on London street”, News). There is polarisation, but the root cause of that polarisation is a growing sense among young adults in deprived areas of social injustice – a lack of meaningful employment; a lack of understanding of their cultural identity; a perception of unjust policing, reinforced by an unjust criminal justice system; an unstable home environment and a lack a positive male role models reinforcing a sense of personal isolation. It’s the combination of these issues that results in a lack of self-worth and a lack of connection to the people around them.
People who are vulnerable due to cultural, social or emotional isolation are those who can be exploited the most by people who use social injustice as the tool to exert their will.
Jonathon Toy
Head of community safety
Southwark Council, London SE1
What makes hacks so special?
In his latest attack on Lord Justice Leveson’s recommendations for effective and independent press regulation, Peter Preston argues that because the press does not like the Leveson package, it should not be implemented (“Let the courts decide on Leveson? That will make things even slower”, Business). This despite the recommendations – with a few concessions to the industry – being set out in a royal charter agreed by all the parties and supported by the victims of press abuse.
His argument is that “a regime nobody [among the regulated] accepts is no regime at all”. Would he apply this to any other industry? To the banks, the police, the security services? If the special pleading and self-serving distortion occurred in any other area, the press would be up in arms.
Dr Evan Harris
Associate editor, Hacked Off
London SW1
Age has no bearing on bigotry
Catherine Bennett (“Don’t older people often say the funniest things?”, Comment) is surely too hard on septuagenarians. I’m nearly 70, but I don’t recognise myself or my contemporaries in her account. Bigotry can be found in all age groups – for example, the BNP and the EDL, whose membership is, I believe, much younger. I worked for Lord Tebbit as a civil servant in the 80s and, though he took a forceful and uncompromising stance that not everyone agreed with, there was no bigotry then. Now, the accolade of CBE (Certified Bigot Extraordinary) might well suit, though there are younger people who equally deserve it.
John Mallinson
Oxted, Surrey
No plum jobs for Britons
It makes me more than a little cross when I read sentences such as: “Finding employees locally is difficult because British workers are not interested in fruit picking” (“Squeeze on migrant jobs alarms UK fruit farmers”, News). My husband’s parents came to England from Ukraine and Italy respectively, and I am not, and never will be, a Ukip voter, but this article failed to explore the question of farmers and migrant workers.
My son would have loved to have found work picking fruit during his summer vacation, but found it impossible to do so. Such jobs are rarely advertised locally, but seem to be handed over to eastern European recruitment agents on the assumption that UK workers don’t want them. In fact, when I approached a strawberry-farming acquaintance on his behalf, I was told: “We don’t employ English.”
Jo Turkas
Canterbury, Kent
School rules? It does not
“Scared of the school gate?” (In focus). Definitely yes, and I was a schools inspector.
Professor Colin Richards
Spark Bridge
Cumbria

Independent:

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Philip Hoare laments the decline in British wildlife, but the cause of this Armageddon is not cars running over squirrels or boys stamping on beetles (“Every creature’s needless death diminishes us all”, 26 May). Rather, it is our shopping habits and farming practices. Browse the rows of products containing palm oil and other problematic ingredients in your local supermarket; admire the chemically treated produce packed in miles of cellophane; and wonder at the customers with trolleys piled so high that you know that much of it will land in the rubbish bin.
Consumer demand dictates that we spray tanker-loads of chemicals and engage in hedge-free monoculture, and that we keep cattle in inhumane production units rather than turning them out on to fallow fields. Such practices destroy habitats and kill insects at the foot of many food chains. Moreover, bee death seriously threatens plant reproduction. It couldn’t be more serious, but we Western consumers don’t seem to draw the conclusions we should.
On top of explaining things to small boys, maybe Hoare should go into oversized supermarkets, take over the Tannoy and give the shoppers a few home truths.
Alan Mitcham
Cologne, Germany
Recalling her visit to the Faroe Islands, Juliet Rix did not mention a particularly barbaric annual event (“High drama in the North Atlantic”, 26 May). In the “grind”, pilot whales are lured into a bay by men in motor boats and stabbed to death. Children have a day off school to witness this vile carnage. The meat from these slaughtered whales is often left to rot. So far this year, 1,115 pilot whales have been slaughtered in the Faroes, the largest kill of any whale species in the world. Whole families and social groups are wiped out, depleting the species’ gene pool and threatening genetic biodiversity.
Susan Smith
Oxford
Crispin Black is astounded by Western governments’ support for jihadism in Libya and Syria (“Did we learn so little about jihadism from 7/7…?”, 26 May). That violent Islamist ideologies are inimical to the interests of Western elites is an assumption that too many commentators have bought into. The West has long appreciated what the religious right can deliver, in terms of control and social and economic conservatism. From the initial grooming of the al-Saud and Wahhabi dynasty as a bulwark against the Ottomans, to the creation of an international mujahideen (producing the Taliban and al-Qa’ida) as a bulwark against Communism, the West and Islamism have a long history of mutual interest. It is not just Libya and Syria that are the most recent manifestations of this; the intervention in Iraq was also designed to replace a secular dictator and a strong state with Islamist hegemony and a deeply damaged state. The occasional “blowback” affects only small people, be they London commuters, New York workers or Mumbai pedestrians.
Peter McKenna
Liverpool
In his report on the communal conflict in Burma, Peter Popham repeats the conventional view that “Muslims and Christians have been at each other’s throats for 1,300 years” (“Killing with kindness…”, 26 May). There is no historical basis for positing such a conflict. Until recently, in areas where both faiths were practised side by side, communities coexisted without conflict. As for the Crusades, so often cited as the example of Muslim/Christian religious enmity, no religious principle was involved; like all wars in the Levant over the millennia until today, they were fought for territory, as, it seems, is the conflict in Arakan.
Maurice Vassie
Deighton, York
Limiting GP visits would only increase the demands on A&E departments (“Cap on number of GP visits being considered by Tories”, 26 May). But an A&E visit costs more than a GP visit and a cap would add to the very pressures on A&E that the Health Secretary has criticised.
Dr Mohsin Khan
Oxford
Capping GP visits puts illness on a proper commercial footing. To take full advantage, we should be able to trade our visit allocations. So, if I have unused visits I could sell them to the highest bidder. And if I have been particularly unwell I can purchase additional visits. What a fine idea this is.
Ashley Herbert
Huddersfield, West Yorkshire

Times:

A lesson in teamwork for Gove and teachers
HEAD TEACHERS always want to do the best for their students but the ever-changing vision and the inconsistent quality  of inspectors create a challenging and stressful working environment (“Schools chief orders heads  to stop whining”, News,  last week).
If Michael Gove worked with head teachers rather than dictating to them, I’m sure  we would all be happier and more successful. Sir Michael Wilshaw, the chief inspector  of schools, seems to forget that while we have to strive to improve, this has to be balanced with the wellbeing  of our staff.
Peter Fowler, Via email 

Bad attitude
When it comes to aspiring for excellence, can teachers really take comfort knowing that almost 20% of children leave school without the reading skills required to be productive members of society? The equivalent figure for Shanghai is 4%. A million people in London alone are unable to read.
In the light of these appalling figures, might it  not be more appropriate for leaders in the teaching profession to concentrate on putting matters right rather than pillorying Gove and threatening industrial action?
Richard Wilson, Emeritus Professor, Loughborough University

School bully
Wilshaw is an arrogant bully who has forgotten his days as a head. His measures seem to have been successful in one school in Hackney. To dictate that all schools should be run in a similar way is naive and doomed to failure. One style does not suit all, Mr Wilshaw.
Richard Jones, Solihull, West Midlands

Pressure point
The heads and teachers we talk to often struggle with staff shortages due to stress-related absence, low morale, the increasing pace of change and frequently poor management practice driven by a climate of fear instead of collaboration. Stressful work environments (and the mental health consequences that often occur as a result) is an issue that needs to be addressed.
Julian Stanley, Teacher Support Network

Age concern
I’m still looking for a teaching post 17 months after graduating, so Sian Griffiths’s article “Fanfare for excellence” (Festival of Education supplement, last week)  did not make me feel optimistic. She tells us that Wilshaw says twentysomethings can be excellent heads: “If you’re good enough, you’re  old enough.”
As a 57-year-old I need a  new soundbite. How about:  “If you’re good enough, you’re young enough?”
Tim Parkinson, Colchester, Essex

Damage limitation
Is Gove jockeying for the Conservative leadership? I really do not think that we need another Scottish prime minister after the damage done by the past two.
Ken Stephenson, Via email

Spelling it out
Head teachers are known to be key in the success of a school but their views are often ignored or dismissed by  Ofsted and the government.  Is there any truth in the rumour that a new qualification for heads is to include a module on spelling words such as subservience, acquiescence, deference and submissiveness?
John Cutland, Wilton, Wiltshire

Ticked off
I find it astonishing that  head teachers are being reprimanded for jeering Gove, as apparently this type of behaviour sets a poor example to children. I have a one-word answer to this: parliament.
Michael Reid, Prescot, Merseyside

A life-affirming display of courage in the face of Woolwich murderers
THE humanity and courage of Ingrid Loyau-Kennett in tackling head-on the savagery of the murder of Drummer Lee Rigby is an inspiration (“The enemy within”, Focus, and “The murderous vanity of man punctured by three quiet women”, Comment, last week).
Not for her crossing to the other side, or  the safety of the shadows. Her actions demonstrated the innate goodness of the human spirit.
Frank Greaney, Liverpool

Rogue males
As Dominic Lawson rightly stated, nothing has changed since 356BC so maybe testosterone might be the problem after all.
Craig Brown, Leicester

Gender roles
The insightful article by Lawson, treated on an emotive level elsewhere, compellingly presented the role of male egotism and female empathy, and the Saudi approach was an eye-opener for me.
Sean Weaver, London N10

Tipping point
Anthony Glees (“Pushed to the edge by preachers of hatred”, Focus, last week) is right that the vast majority of Muslims in Britain want nothing to do with this form of Islam and are as horrified as everyone else by the murder of Drummer Rigby, but he is also correct in saying that the patience of the public could so easily turn to anger and hatred.
R Howard, Blackpool, Lancashire

Staffing boost can cure NHS ills
THE difficulties faced by the NHS are entirely due to a total failure in manpower planning (Camilla Cavendish, “Exit Stalin. Now let the little people rescue the NHS”, Comment, last week).
In 1996 it became evident that 60% of students in some medical schools were female, and with their inevitable and entirely reasonable need to work part-time during their child-bearing years we would need a lot more doctors.
The majority of doctors of retirement age were male at that time and when a couple of years later the announcement was first made about the European Working Time Directive, it became clear we’d have to train two doctors for every one that retired.
More recently there has been an increase in part-time working by male doctors — job sharing with their GP wives.  It was said doctors only married nurses or barmaids because they had no time  to meet anyone else. How things change.
The situation was made worse in 2004 by the decision to relieve GPs of their responsibility for out-of-hours cover. As has been indicated in the media at some length, this change has put unreasonable pressure on accident and emergency departments. The increase in population, plus a significant increase in the elderly and in medical advances, has emphasised the need for more staff.
Every attempt at reorganisation of the NHS has produced further difficulties for frontline staff and more enthusiasm for retirement or emigration.
The solution is more doctors, more nurses and more hospital beds, and until the government takes this firmly on board, the current chaos will continue.
John Crosby, Taunton, Somerset

Cash injection
The NHS will improve when the money follows the patient and we will only be able to afford it when access to services is linked to National Insurance contributions. There will, of course, need to be debate as to what that means.  I worked in the NHS for five years and left despondent. 
Stewart Ramsay, London W7

Exam boards failing duty to pupils
LAST summer there was a national outcry when thousands of pupils failed to receive the grades they were expecting in GCSE English. Our colleagues in the maintained sector took legal action that led to the conclusion that, although what had happened was unfair, it was not unlawful.
As heads of leading independent schools, we believe we have a duty to make the public aware at this time that problems in the marking and grading of public exams do not affect only one subject, or one level of exam, or schools belonging to a particular sector.
For several years we have been worried about the robustness of the “examinations industry” in England. We have concerns about erratic examiners and unexplained swings in results. There are also concerns that it is easier to get top grades with some boards than others.
Every year our staff oversee the submission of appeals against inaccurate marking. Sometimes as many as 100 papers from a single school are upgraded on appeal. This indicates an unacceptable level of inaccuracy. Sometimes faults with the exam system have cost able pupils their university place.
As the exam season starts, we want to make it clear on behalf of all those taking public examinations that we are not convinced that the problems that affect the exam system have been addressed with sufficient speed, let alone resolved.

Andrew Grant, St Albans School
Louise Simpson, Bromley High School
Tony Little, Eton College
Emma McKendrick, Downe House School 
Tim Hands, Magdalen College School
Jonathan Leigh, Marlborough College
Christopher Ray, The Manchester Grammar School
Felicia Kirk, St Mary’s Calne
Bernard Trafford, Royal Grammar School Newcastle 
Kenneth Durham, University College School 
Richard Harman, Uppingham School
Cynthia Hall, Wycombe Abbey School
Anthony Seldon, Wellington College

Points

Accounting error
AA Gill’s cavalier claim about Harrods’ profitability (or his assumption about the lack of it) is wide of the mark (“Disney Café at Harrods”, Table Talk, Magazine, last week). Harrods continues to exceed expectations in terms of turnover and profitability this year, not least as a result of its owners committing record capital expenditure to the group.
Katharine Witty, Harrods Group Director, Corporate Affairs

Band practice
The picture of Nigel Farage accompanying the article  “I must be big — I now need bodyguards” (News, last week) showed him smoking a cigar with a band on it. Any Englishman with pretensions of being civilised would know that cigar bands should be removed before smoking. It’s only ill-informed Americans who do not do so. On the  other hand, Farage has done wonders for the name Nigel.
Nigel Bolitho, Cambridge

Art transplant
Aart van Kruiselbergen (“Total eclipse of the art”, Letters, last week) was disappointed  with a recent visit to Tate  St Ives. The current size of  the exhibition spaces and constraints in art handling facilities mean the gallery has to close three times a year to change and rehang the displays. To address this we are about to embark on a refurbishment that will provide 100% more gallery space and extensive new collection care facilities by 2016. It will mean visitors will be able to enjoy exhibitions throughout the year.
Mark Osterfield, Executive Director, Tate St Ives, Cornwall

Aid for disabled people
The announcement by Lynne Featherstone, the international development minister, that her department is seeking advice from charities on how to target aid to benefit disabled people comes not a moment too soon for deafblind people in developing countries (“UK aid charities ‘forget’ disabled”, News, last week). People  with disabilities have for a long time been ignored in international development. The current millennium development goals that end  in 2015 do not have any meaningful mention of disabled people and overlook 1bn of the world’s population. We support deafblind people in Bangladesh, India, Kenya, Tanzania, Peru, Romania and Uganda. Deafblind children in these countries need to receive education and healthcare. Without this, many will lead short, lonely lives.
James Thornberry, Director, Sense International

Two sides to every story
Although India Knight makes a vitriolic case for the shallowness of every male on the planet, the column would have been more readable if it had been less broad brush (“The merest buttering-up and stale men think they’re sexy wolves”, Comment, last week). Not every relationship teeters on the simplistic weakness  she portrays. My wife of 14 years upped and left her two young children and myself. Her responsibilities obviously  were too much of an impediment to her  rainbow-chasing aspirations.
Name withheld, Bristol

Corrections and clarifications
Complaints about inaccuracies in all sections of The Sunday Times, including online, should be addressed to editor@sunday-times.co.uk or The Editor, The Sunday Times, 3 Thomas More Square, London E98 1ST. In addition, the Press Complaints Commission (complaints@pcc.org.uk or 020 7831 0022) examines formal complaints about the editorial content of UK newspapers and magazines (and their websites)

Birthdays
Keith Allen, actor, 60; Dominic Cooper, actor, 35; Heather Couper, astronomer, 64; Sir Mark Elder, conductor, 66; Tony Hadley, singer, 53; Lasse Hallstrom, film director, 67; Mark Lawrenson, football pundit, 56; Helen Oxenbury, children’s illustrator, 75; Tim Rice-Oxley, musician in Keane, 37; Charlie Watts, drummer, 72; Mark and Steve Waugh, cricketers, 48

Anniversaries
1780 anti-Catholic march to parliament becomes first No Popery riot; 1840 birth of Thomas Hardy, novelist; 1857 birth of Edward Elgar, composer; 1896 Guglielmo Marconi applies for first radio patent; 1919 anarchists set off bombs in seven American cities, killing two; 1953 coronation of Queen at Westminster Abbey; 1994 RAF Chinook crashes on Mull of Kintyre, killing 27

Telegraph:

SIR – While celebrating the opening of the Mary Rose museum and the achievements of the people who raised and preserved her (Features, May 30), one man without whom she would undoubtedly still lie undiscovered seems to have been largely forgotten.
Alexander McKee, a slightly eccentric amateur diver and military historian, spent years researching the wreck. With a team of weekend helpers, and largely derided by professional archaeologists, he eventually found “McKee’s ghost ship” by digging trenches in the sea bed 50ft deep. Only then did the professionals move in.
However, personality clashes arose and McKee was soon out of the picture. There should be a bust of him in the museum foyer to recognise that, without him, there would be no Mary Rose, and no museum.
Henry Yelf
Andover, Hampshire

SIR – We have written to the Prime Minister jointly as leaders of Britain’s major faiths, representing many millions of people. We strongly oppose the Same Sex Marriage Bill which if enacted will affect all those of faith and those with none.
We are disappointed that the Government has failed to engage in meaningful debate with the many different faith communities in Britain. It has wrongly assumed that opposition to the redefinition of marriage is confined to a small number of Christians. In particular during the Committee stage of the Bill, faith leaders from other religions, races and creeds were not consulted.
We are deeply concerned that this legislation is being rushed through Parliament with wholly inadequate scrutiny. We can see no objective reason for haste. The shortened parliamentary timetable, whilst legal, goes against the traditional British spirit of fairness. It seems to have been designed to curtail debate and prevent amendments.
The haste with which this legislation is being driven through Parliament and the failure to talk to all religions will mean that the problems which we have repeatedly highlighted will be written into law with serious and harmful consequences for the health of society, family life, and human rights such as freedom of religion and of speech.
We are unconvinced by the safeguards upon which the Government has placed such emphasis. Some of Britain’s most eminent scholars and lawyers emphatically say that these are legally unsustainable. Moreover they are seriously limited in their scope. They do not protect or apply to those who work in either the public or private sectors. They will not protect the teacher or the parent who, for religious, or philosophical reasons, supports the current definition of marriage. Already we have seen cases of those who back traditional marriage being sacked or demoted. These consequences of the proposed legislation are clearly unacceptable.
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01 Jun 2013
We understand that the Government has invested significant political capital in seeking to get this legislation onto the statute book despite its absence from its manifestos. However, it is surely clear that there are significant problems with this legislation which require further scrutiny and probably amendment. We therefore urge the Government to pause so that this may take place.
Because of its serious flaws we will continue to resist this proposed legislation and to highlight its injustice and unfairness. It creates a two-tier form of marriage in one of which the importance of consummation, procreation and the welfare of children, as well as issues such as adultery have been ignored, and devalues the meaning of marriage itself.
Marriage between a man and a woman is the fundamental building block of human society. These proposals would radically undermine the nature and place of the family in our society. We cannot believe that this is what you intend and therefore ask the Government to pause before taking such a damaging step.
Bishop Doye Agama, Presiding Bishop, Apostolic Pastoral Congress
Mr Omar Ali, President of Federation of Student Islamic Societies (FOSIS)
Bishop Angaelos, General Bishop, Coptic Orthodox Church, UK
Mr John Beard, Buddhist
Mr James Bogle QC, Vice-Chairman of the Catholic Union
Mr Ashraf Chowdery, Chairman, Association of Muslim Governors
Dr Khurshid Drabu CBE, Chairman, Medina Mosque Trust
Dr Ahmed Al Dubyan, Islamic Culture Centre & Regent’s Park Mosque
Rev Canon Ben Enwuchola Anglican Chaplain to the Nigerian Community
Mrs Sarah Finch, Member of General Synod
Shaykh Suliman Gani, Imam, Tooting Islamic Centre
Dr Lee Gatiss, Director, Church Society
Rev John Glass, General Superintendant, Elim Pentecostal Churches
Bishop Creswell Green, Chair Joint Council of Anglo-Caribbean Churches, General Overseer of the Latter-Rain Outpouring Revival Ministries
Shaykh Dr. Haitham al-Haddad, Founder and Executive Director, MRDF
Dr Omer El-Hamdoon, President of the Muslim Association of Britain
Rev George Hargreaves, Founder of the Christian Party
Bishop Paul Hendricks, Roman Catholic Auxiliary Bishop of Southwark & Co-Chairman of the Christian Muslim Forum
Bishop Michael Hill, Anglican Bishop of Bristol
Maulana Shamsul Hoque, Chair, Council of Mosques Tower Hamlet
Rev James Hunt Rector, Bishops Waltham
Mrs Rebecca Hunt, Barrister
Shaykh Dr Musharraf Hussain, Chief Imam, Karimia Institute
Dr Hussein Jiwa, President of the Council of European Jamaats
Pastor Jean Bosco Kanyemesha, Congolese Pastorship UK
Dr A.Majid Katme, Islamic Medical Association
Mr Dilowar Khan, President, Islamic Forum of Europe
Seyed Yousif Al Khoei, Director, Al Khoei Foundation
The Venerable Michael Lawson, Former Archdeacon of Hampstead
Mrs Susie Leafe, Member of General Synod
Rabbi Natan Levy
Archbishop Bernard Longley, Roman Catholic Archbishop of Birmingham
Bishop Patrick Lynch, Roman Catholic Auxiliary Bishop of Southwark
Apostle Caleb Mackintosh, General Overseer, Bibleway Churches (UK)
Maulana Sarfraz Madni, Chairman Mosques and Imams National Advisory Board (MINAB)
Shaykh Ibrahim Mogra, Co-Chairman of the Christian Muslim Forum
Shaykh Shams Adduha Muhammad, Principal Ebrahim College
Farooq Murad, Secretary General, The Muslim Council of Britain
Dr Mohammed Naseem, Chairman, Birmingham Central Mosque
Bishop Michael Nazir Ali, Former Bishop of Rochester
Mr Ade Omooba, Christian Concern
Archbishop F.N.Onyuku-Opokiri, Born Again Christ Healing Church International
Yusuf Patel, SRE Islamic
Pastor Pete Pennant, Lighthouse Church, Birmingham
Rev Paul Perkin, Chairman, Fellowship of Confessing Anglicans, UK and Ireland
Shaykh Abdul Qayum, Senior Imam, East London Mosque
Mr Munawer Rattansey, Vice-President of the World Federation of Kmisc Shia Ithnari
Maulana Shahid Raza, Chief Imam Leicester Central Mosque
Mr Giles Rowe, Catholic Forum
Sir Iqbal Sacranie, Chairman, Al-Risalah Trust
Mr John Smeaton, National Director, SPUC
Bishop Keith Sinclair, Anglican Bishop of Birkenhead
Bhai Sahib Bhai Mohinder Singh, Chairman, Guru Nanak Nishkam Sewak Jatha’
Archbishop Peter Smith, Roman Catholic Archbishop of Southwark
Archbishop George Stack, Roman Catholic Archbishop of Cardiff
Rev John Stevens, Director of the Fellowship of Independent Evangelical Churches
Canon Dr Chris Sugden, Executive Secretary, Anglican Mainstream
Prebendary Rod Thomas, Chairman of Reform
Rev Dr Simon Vibert, Wycliffe Hall, Oxford
Bishop Alfred Williams General Overseer Christ faith Tabernacle International Churches
SIR – I was deeply saddened to learn of Bishop Holtam’s letter (May 30). Bishop Holtam is a well-intentioned churchman who has done much for deprived communities in London during his career.
However, his apparent attempt to place those Christians who seek to uphold traditional marriage in the same category as those who defended Apartheid and slavery is deeply unhelpful. It will be particularly offensive to those in black majority churches who do not share his view.
If the Bishop reflects on his visit to the thriving St Paul’s congregation in Salisbury, or the recent Prayer Market event involving eight churches at which I spoke, he would understand that these growing congregations object to gay marriage not because they object to homosexuals, but because they believe marriage should follow the biblical pattern affirmed by Jesus in Matthew 19.
To redefine the institution of marriage will not remove prejudice, but instead risk legal ambiguities and unnecessarily provoke a sense of resentment and isolation among very many Christians.
If today’s church leaders follow Bishop Nicholas, and allow public opinion to define what they preach, I fear the decline in some parts of the Church of England will be terminal.
John Glen MP (Con)
Member of Parliament for Salisbury
London SW1

SIR – The forthcoming spending round will bring reductions in Government spending and we are gravely concerned that any cuts to the science budget could cause severe and lasting damage to the country’s research environment.
We are 42 medical research organisations and 130 scientists. With medical research charities and their supporters together funding more than £1 billion of vital medical research in 2011, we have made a huge contribution to improving the health of the British population through scientific advances.
For many of us, the impact and extent of our research funding would not have been possible were it not for the partnership working with the Government, including through the existence of the Charity Research Support Fund.
All of us rely on the support of this fund, which helps cover the indirect costs of research such as heating and lighting laboratories in universities, allowing charities to pay for the scientists and materials needed to understand disease and find cures. For example, for the Breast Cancer Campaign losing this income could be the equivalent of the charity losing around a quarter of its annual £5 million research fund, which would have direct consequences for breast cancer patients.
With this fund only protected until 2014-15 and with extra pressure to cut budgets, we must ensure that the Government maintains its commitment to protect both the Charity Research Support Fund and the amount available through it, as well as ring-fencing the science budget so that we can continue to save and improve lives now and in the future.
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Lord Willis of Knaresborough, Chair, Association of Medical Research Charities
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Pippa Gough, General Manager, Children with Cancer UK
Catherine Arkley, Chief Executive, Children’s Liver Disease Foundation
Anne Faulkner, Honorary Director, CFS Foundation
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Karen Addington, Chief Executive, JDRF
Peter Storey, Director of Marketing, Kidney Research UK
Dr Teresa Tate, Medical Advisor, Marie Curie Cancer Care
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Roger Evans, Secretary, Neurosciences Research Foundation
Bill Pollack, Chairman, Northern Ireland Leukaemia Research Fund
Gilda Witte, Chief Executive, Ovarian Cancer Action
Dr Kieran Breen, Director of Research and Innovation, Parkinson’s UK
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Professor Anthony Smith, Chair, Pharmacy Research UK
Dr Iain Frame, Director of Research, Prostate Cancer UK
Michael Constant, Chairman, Restore Burn and Wound Research
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Dr Mark Dockrell, Scientific Advisor, South West Thames Kidney Fund
John Shanley, CEO, Sparks
Annwen Jones, Chief Executive, Target Ovarian Cancer
Sarah Lindsell, Chief Executive, The Brain Tumour Charity
Dr Susan Walsh, Head of Research and Specialist Services, The CGD Society
Anne Faulkner, Honorary Director of the Research Foundation, The Chronic Fatigue Syndrome
Wendy Thomas, Chief Executive, The Migraine Trust
John Solly, Director, The Myrovlytis Trust
Louise de Winter, Chief Executive, The Urology Foundation
Jayne Spink, Chief Executive, Tuberous Sclerosis Association
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Dr Aga Gambus, Principal Investigator, School of Cancer Sciences, University of Birmingham
Prof Alan Ashworth, Chief Executive, Institute of Cancer Research
Dr Alexander Garvin, Post-Doctoral Research Fellow, School of Cancer Sciences, University of Birmingham
Prof Alison Banham, Professor of Haemato-oncology, Radcliffe Department of Medicine, University of Oxford
Alun Passey, Post-graduate student, Department of Surgery and Cancer, Imperial College London
Dr Alyson Huntley, Research Associate, Centre of Academic Primary Care, University of Bristol
Amanda Harvey, Biosciences, Brunel University
Dr Ana M Schor, Reader emeritus, Bio-Engineering Unit, University of Dundee
Dr Ana P. Costa-Pereira, Group Leader and Senior Lecturer in Cell Signalling, Faculty of Medicine – Department of Surgery and Cancer, Imperial College London
Dr Andrea Waylen, Lecturer in Psychology, School of Oral and Dental Sciences, University of Bristol
Dr Andrew Macdonald, Associate Professor in Viral Oncology, School of Molecular and Cellular Biology, Faculty of Biological Sciences, University of Leeds
Prof Andy Sewell, Distinguished Research Professor, Wellcome Trust Senior Investigator and Research Director, Institute of Infection and Immunity, Cardiff University
Prof Angela Cox, Institute for Cancer Studies, University of Sheffield
Dr Anna Campbell, Lecturer in Clinical Exercise Science, Institute of Sport and Exercise, University of Dundee
Dr Anna Collinson, Sectional Laboratory Manager, Division of Cancer, Department of Surgery and Cancer, Imperial College London
Prof Annie S Anderson, Centre for Research into Cancer Prevention and Screening, University of Dundee
Prof Anthony Howell, Professor of Medical Oncology, Paterson Institute for Cancer Research, University of Manchester
Dr Anthony Kong, Breakthrough Clinician Scientist and Honorary NHS Consultant in Clinical Oncology, Weatherall Institute of Molecular Medicine, University of Oxford
Barry Furr, Chairman Llangarth Ltd
Prof Bharat Jasani, Head of Pathology, Institute of Cancer & Genetics, Cardiff University
Caroline Sproat, PhD Student, Centre for Tumour Biology, Barts Cancer Institute,Queen Mary University of London
Dr Charles Birts, Senior Postdoctoral Research Fellow, Cancer Sciences Unit, University of Southampton
Prof Christine J Watson, Professor of Cell and Cancer Biology, Department of Pathology, University of Cambridge
Dr Claire M Wells, Lecturer, Division of Cancer Studies, King’s College London
Dr Claire Perks, Senior Research Fellow, University of Bristol
Dr Colin McCowan, Robertson Centre for Biostatistics, University of Glasgow
Dr Cornelia H de Moor, Lecturer in RNA Biology, School of Pharmacy, Centre for Biomolecular Sciences, University of Nottingham
Prof David Cameron, Professor of Oncology & Clinical Director, Edinburgh University Cancer Research Centre & Director of Cancer Services NHS Lothian
Prof David J Waugh, Director, Centre for Cancer Research and Cell Biology & Professor of Molecular Oncology and Therapeutics, School of Medicine, Dentistry and Biomedical Sciences, Queen’s University, Belfast
Dr David Mann, Reader in Cell Cycle Control, Department of Life Sciences, Imperial College London
Dr Deborah Fenlon, Senior Lecturer Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Southampton
Demin Li, Principal Investigator, Radcliffe Department of Medicine University of Oxford
Prof Diana Eccles, Professor of Cancer Genetics, Faculty of Medicine, Academic Unit of Cancer Sciences, University of Southampton
Prof Diana Harcourt, Co-Director, Centre for Appearance Research, University of the West of England
Diana Romero, Research Associate Department Surgery and Cancer, Imperial College London
Prof Doug Easton, Professor of Genetic Epidemiology, Centre for Cancer Genetic Epidemiology, University of Cambridge
Dr Duncan Sproul, Medical Research Council, Institute of Genetics and Molecular Medicine, University of Edinburgh
Edmund Gore, Masters Student, Department of Surgery and Cancer, Imperial College London
Dr Edward Tate, Reader in Chemical Biology, Department of Chemistry, Imperial College London
Dr Elinor Sawyer, BRC Clinical Research Consultant in Clinical Oncology, Guy’s ‘and St Thomas’ Hospital / Kings College London
Elisabete Carapuca, PhD Student, Centre for Tumour Biology, Barts Cancer Institute, Queen Mary, University of London
Dr Ellen Copson, Senior Lecturer in Medical Oncology, University of Southampton
Dr Endre Kiss-Toth, Reader in Cell Signalling, Department of Cardiovascular Science, University of Sheffield
Prof Eric W-F Lam, Professor of Molecular Oncology, Department of Surgery and Cancer, Imperial College London
Dr Fedor Berditchevski, School of Cancer Sciences, University of Birmingham
Dr Florian Markowetz, Cancer Research UK Cambridge Institute, University of Cambridge
Dr Frank Dudbridge, Reader in Statistical Genetics, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine
Gavin Alan Dorman Metcalf, Postgraduate Researcher (Molecular Cancer Medicine), Department of Surgery and Cancer, Imperial College London
George Elia, Senior Scientific Officer and Tissue Bank assistant, Centre for Tumour Biology, Barts Cancer Institute, Queen Mary University of London
Dr Georgios Giamas, Team Leader, Division of Cancer, Department of Surgery and Cancer, Imperial College London
Dr Gill Hubbard, Reader and co-director, Cancer Care Research Centre, School of Nursing, midwifery and health, University of Stirling
Prof Gillian Murphy, Deputy Head, Dept of Oncology, University of Cambridge
Prof Gillian Tozer, Department of Oncology, University of Sheffield
Glynn Donovan, Higher Specialist Biomedical Scientist, David Evans Medical Research Centre, Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust
Graham A Geddes, Seconded Clinical Teaching Fellow, School of Nursing, Midwifery and Health, University of Stirling
Prof Gwyn T. Williams, Professor of Biochemistry, Keele University
Prof Harry Mellor, School of Biochemistry, University of Bristol
Helen Stone, PhD student, School of Cancer Sciences, University of Birmingham
Prof Ian Kunkler, Edinburgh Cancer Centre, University of Edinburgh
Dr Ingunn Holen, Reader in Bone Oncology, Academic Unit of Clinical Oncology, University of Sheffield
Jacqui Gath, Patient and Lay Advocate, Independent Cancer Patient Voices and Sheffield CRP
Dr James Flanagan, Breast Cancer Campaign Scientific Fellow, Department of Surgery and Cancer, Imperial College London
Dr Jane M. Robertson, Researcher, Cancer Care Research Centre, University of Stirling
Dr Jason S. Carroll, Senior Group Leader, Cancer Research UK and University of Cambridge
Dr Jean-Christophe Bourdon, Head of cancer research laboratory and Reader, University of Dundee
Prof Jeff Holly, Professor of Clinical Science, School of Clinical Science, University of Bristol
Jenny Gomm, Postdoctoral Research Assistant, Centre for Tumour Biology, Queen Mary, University of London
Dr Jeremy Blaydes, Reader in Cancer Cell Biology Faculty of Medicine, University of Southampton
Dr Jo Armes, Kings College London
Dr Jo Morris, Reader in Cancer Genetics, School of Cancer Genetics, University of Birmingham
Dr John Maher, Senior Lecturer in Immunology, NIHR Biomedical Research Centre at Guy’s and St Thomas’ NHS Foundation Trust and King’s College London Research Oncology
Dr John Marshall Reader, Centre for Tumour Biology, Barts Cancer Institute, Queen Mary University of London
Dr Jonathan Morris, Senior Lecturer, Cancer Studies, King’s College London
Prof Joy Burchell, Professor of Glyco-oncology, Research Oncology, King’s College London
Dr Julia MW Gee, Breast Cancer Campaign Fellow & Senior Research Fellow, Cardiff School of Pharmacy & Pharmaceutical Sciences, Cardiff University
Prof Jürgen Müller, Associate Professor, Warwick Medical School University of Warwick
Prof Justin Stebbing, Professor of Cancer Medicine and Medical Oncology, Imperial College
Dr Kate Moore, Postdoctoral Research Assistant, Centre for Tumour Biology, Barts Cancer Institute, Queen Mary University of London
Prof Kay Marshall, Head of the School of Pharmacy & Pharmaceutical Sciences, Faculty of Medical & Human Sciences, University of Manchester
Prof Kaye Williams, Chair of Experimental Therapeutics and Imaging, School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences, University of Manchester
Keith Brennan, Faculty of Life Sciences, University of Manchester
Prof Kevin M. Prise, Centre for Cancer Research & Cell Biology, Queen’s University Belfast
Dr Laura Smith, Postdoctoral Research Fellow, Leeds Institute of Cancer Studies and Pathology, St James’s University Hospital
Prof Lawrence S. Young, Pro-Vice Chancellor for Research (Life Sciences and Medicine) and Capital Development, Warwick Medical School, University of Warwick
Dr Linda Haywood, Research Assistant, Centre for Tumour Biology, Queen Mary, University of London
Dr Lodewijk Dekker, Associate Professor, The School of Pharmacy, University of Nottingham
Dr Luca Magnani, JRF Fellow, Department of Surgery and Cancer, Imperial College London
Maggie Wilcox, Patient Advocate, Independent Cancer patient Voices
Dr Mark Petronczki, Team leader, London Research Institute, Cancer Research UK
Prof Matteo Zanda, Personal Chair in Medical Technologies, Kosterlitz Centre for Therapeutics, University of Aberdeen
Dr Matthew J Smalley, Senior Lecturer, European Cancer Stem Cell Research Institute, Cardiff University
Dr Matthias Eberl, Senior Lecturer, Cardiff Institute of Infection & Immunity, Cardiff University
Dr Michael Allen, Postdoctoral Research Assistant, Centre for Tumour Biology, Barts Cancer Institute, Queen Mary, University of London
Prof Naomi Chayen, Department of Surgery and Cancer, Imperial College London
Dr Niamh O’Brien, Breast Cancer Campaign Scientific Fellow, Centre for Cancer Research and Cell Biology, Queens University Belfast
Nick Dibb, Reader, IRDB, Imperial College London
Prof Nicola Brown, Department of Oncology, University of Sheffield
Prof Nigel Bundred, Professor Of surgical Oncology, University Hospital of South Manchester
Olivia Fletcher, Senior Staff Scientist, Division of Breast Cancer Research, The Institute of Cancer Research
Dr Paola Vagnarelli, Lecturer in Biosciences, Brunel University
Prof Paul Haggarty, Head of Lifelong Health, Rowett Institute, University of Aberdeen
Prof Paul Symonds, Professor of Clinical Oncology, University of Leicester
Prof Peter Schmid, Chair in Cancer Medicine, Brighton and Sussex Medical School, University of Sussex
Dr Rachael Natrajan, Group Leader, Breast Cancer Campaign Research Fellow, The Institute of Cancer Research
Dr Rebecca Jones, Postdoctoral Research Fellow, School of Cancer Sciences, University of Birmingham
Dr Rhys Morgan, Post-Doctoral Research Scientist, School of Cellular and Molecular Medicine, University of Bristol
Dr Richard Grose, Senior Lecturer, Barts Cancer Institute, Queen Mary, University of London
Prof Richard Kennedy, Centre for Cancer Research and Cell Biology, Queen’s University of Belfast
Prof Richard Kennedy, Centre for Cancer Research and Cell Biology, Queen’s University of Belfast
Prof Robert Brown, Head of Division of Cancer, Department Surgery & Cancer, Imperial College London
Dr Roger Grand, Reader in Cancer Sciences, School of Cancer Sciences, University of Birmingham
Dr Rosemary Bass, Senior Lecturer, Department of Applied Sciences, Northumbria University
Emeritus Professor Rosemary Walker, Dept of Cancer Studies and Molecular Medicine, University of Leicester
Dr Sarah Blair-Reid Postdoctoral Researcher, School of Cancer Sciences, University of Birmingham
Prof Sarah E Pinder, Professor of Breast Pathology & Head of Section of Research Oncology, Division of Cancer Studies, King’s College London
Sarah Lewis, Senior Lecturer, University of Bristol
Prof Seth L Schor, Bio-Engineering Unit, University of Dundee
Dr Simon Langdon, Senior Lecturer, Division of Pathology, University of Edinburgh
Dr Stefan Roberts, Reader in Cancer Biology, School of Cellular & Molecular Medicine, University of Bristol
Dr Stephan Feller, Biological Systems Architecture Group, Weatherall Institute of Molecular Medicine, Department of Oncology, University of Oxford
Dr Stephanie Kermorgant, Senior Lecturer, Centre for Tumour Biology, Queen Mary, University of London
Prof Stewart Martin, Associate Professor and Reader in Cancer and Radiation Biology, Department of Clinical Oncology, University of Nottingham
Dr Stuart McDonald, Principle investigator and Lecturer, Centre for Tumour Biology, Barts Cancer Institute, Queen Mary, University of London
Dr Sue Astley, Reader in Imaging Sciences, Institute of Population Health, University of Manchester
Dr Suzanne A Eccles, Team Leader, The Institute of Cancer Research
Prof Thomas Hughes, Associate Professor of Cancer Biology, Leeds Institute of Molecular Medicine, University of Leeds
Prof Tracy Robson, School of Pharmacy, Queen’s University Belfast
Dr V Budhram-Mahadeo, Lecturer, Medical Molecular Biology Unit, University College London
Dr Valerie Jenkins, Deputy Director, Sussex Health Outcomes Research & Education in Cancer, University of Sussex
Dr Veronika Jenei, Senior Research Fellow, Cancer Sciences Unit, University of Southampton
plex surgery is often performed on patients with many other serious medical problems. Good quality care requires not only skilled technical performance in the operating theatre but diligent, informed aftercare by experienced surgical and medical personnel.
For a variety of reasons explored in the British Medical Journal study (“Death risk lottery of NHS surgery”, report, May 29), this may not be available at weekends.
One of the major stumbling blocks to providing that quality care for patients is the enforcement of regulations demanding no more than a 48-hour working week, which affects availability of staff, handovers and training. It is not surprising, therefore, that surgical outcomes at weekends have been less than satisfactory.
The Royal College of Surgeons has been highlighting for some time the risks of adherence to the European Working Time Regulations when applied to surgeons, but in spite of rhetoric there has been little action to change these rules.
It appears, sadly, that the chickens have come home to roost.
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Richard Collins
Former Vice-President, Royal College of Surgeons
Canterbury, Kent
SIR – Has anyone asked why we need more doctors (“We need thousands more
A & E doctors, says Hunt”, report, May 28)? Between 1960 and 2011 the population rose from approximately 52.4 million to 62.6 million: an increase of approximately 20 per cent. Over the same period, medical school intake rose by more than 70 per cent.
Between 1999 and 2010 the number of consultants alone increased from 21,410 to 35,781, an increase of some 65 per cent, and between 1999 and 2009 the number of NHS managers increased by 82 per cent.
There have been many reports of increased waiting times and imminent failures of A & E departments but in view of the actual figures none of the explanations make much sense. The increase in doctors, consultants and managers far outpaces the increase in the population.
Technological advances have made outpatient investigation easier and much faster. If these statistics were transferred to any other organisation the obvious conclusion would be an increase in inefficiency. Would this degree of incompetence be tolerated in any structure other than the NHS?
L S Illis
Emeritus consultant neurologist
Lymington, Hampshire
SIR – Dr Steve Allder’s approach to organisational improvement (“My cure for the NHS”, Comment, May 30) needs to be propagated throughout the NHS. Patients, medical staff and taxpayers would all benefit. There can be no good reasons why it’s not happening now.
Stephen Gledhill
Evesham, Worcestershire
HS2 will not improve Britain’s economic future
SIR – Sir Albert Bore (Letters, May 29) says that increasing capacity on the rail network is critical to our economic future.
Before Lord Beeching took his axe to our rail network, many firms, such as the Marconi Company in Chelmsford, had railway lines leading into their premises so that their products could be loaded directly from the factory into goods wagons for transport to the docks.
How many firms today plan to connect their factories to the high-speed rail link? What percentage of trains on the high-speed rail link will consist of goods wagons? And into which docks and airports will these high-speed trains run?
In each case, I fear the answer is “not a lot”. The truth is that HS2 is simply one of those elusive and unquantifiable EU benefits we could well do without.
It is designed largely for the businessmen who will travel on it.
Richard Shaw
Dunstable, Bedfordshire
SIR – Sir Albert Bore must be aware that high-speed rail does not increase the prosperity of cities outside the capital – one need only look to Lille in France, with HS1, for an example.
It is quite right that Sir Albert put his city of Birmingham ahead of the national interest; but is this just misguided self-interest?
He is right to say that we in Britain are failing to upgrade our infrastructure. This is why we need to abandon HS2 immediately and spend the equivalent capital funds on existing rail and road infrastructure for the benefit of the whole nation, not just a few cities.
Economic regeneration is vital for our nation, but engaging in a massive vanity project such as HS2, which is now shown to have no proven economic basis whatsoever and fails even the Government business criteria, is surely a massive folly.
Paul Fullagar
London SE1

Irish Times:

The word criminals conjures all sorts of stereotypes of what that means. Closer to reality is that many people in jail should not be there, and many more outside should. It is a strange island where, if you do not pay your television licence, you can and do go to jail. Yet, many who are inherently corrupt rarely are called to account. It matters not what justice is, morally and much less legally, here. I suspect we are not all in this together or ever were.
Also in this section
Our children deserve a lot better than this
A moving poem that every parent should read
Nobody listening as families drown in debt
It is a strange island too that you can go to jail for stealing food just to stay alive.
There were 430,000 people in ‘food poverty’ in 2012, according to the Department Of Social Protection, facing those risks.
One unlucky man who did, a 57-year-old out of work actor, was caught stealing food for his children.
He was convicted, branded with a criminal record that classes him a thief. This conviction could prevent him from finding work in the future.
The vicious cycle goes on.
Yet, if you were a former Taoiseach – one Charles J Haughey – of this country, who ‘under-declared’ his taxes by over €2,000,000 after a tax assessment by the Revenue Commissioners for the cash gifts he received, and then had it reduced to zero by an independent appeals commissioner, then you’d know we are not all in this together.
Barry Clifford
Oughterard, Galway
NATIONAL VIGIL FOR LIFE
* I am not a member of any organisation but I am a person of conscience. That is why I am writing to you to air my views on abortion. The National Vigil for Life is an non-denominational group who are organising a Vigil for Life on June 8, in Merrion Square, Dublin, and this brought the whole issue of abortion to the fore for me.
As the National Vigil for Life says, the Government plans to legalise abortion in July in Ireland.
I just know in my heart of hearts that the Government is going down the wrong path.
Some people say give women the right to choose. But I ask the question: is it right to give a person the right to take a life?
Who, reading this letter, wished they never had a life – no matter how hard – with all its ups and downs?
Well, we would say, thank God for this life. Of course, as human beings, we can have empathy with the women who want to have an abortion. They are in a dark place, especially if suicidal. But the solution is not abortion. It is to care for these women.
Then they can decide if they don’t want the baby and they can adopt and give joy to others who can’t have a baby. I believe the gift of life is sacred.
Josephine McEvoy
Address with editor
POLITICAL ACCOUNTABILITY
* Labour councillor Nuala Nolan is right but unfortunately people will continue to vote for parties, including hers, who don’t understand the basics of real economics.
Money is useless unless you can afford what you really need in life.
Low rents and house values make great economic sense, not the other way around.
This means pressure on wages are reduced and Ireland becomes a competitive and advanced economy.
As shelter costs are generally a person’s greatest expense, this also is great for the local economy. Add to that tax breaks for local investment, and a supportive and tax-free environment for Irish start-up businesses, we could get this country moving again.
Who in Ireland wouldn’t love to give it a go rather than languish on the dole? We reset the Irish economy once with the land commission, sadly we go not seem to have the leadership to do so again.
Pauline Bleach
Wolli Creek, Australia
HARSH LESSONS
* With regard to the terror of corporal punishment in Irish schools during the 1950s and 1960s, two letters appeared in your paper.
One, entitled ‘School of Terror’, from Paddy O’Brien, of Balbriggan, Co Dublin, said that in those days schoolchildren who weren’t able to keep up with their lessons were assaulted with a cane supplied by the State.
The other, entitled ‘School Misery’, said sadistic punishments were administered on a daily basis during the ’50s and ’60s.
This, of course, was physical abuse and the one thing to remember is that any kind of childhood abuse – be it sexual or otherwise – remains with the child for the rest of their lives.
I went to a private school in Dublin in the 1960s.
Physical and mental abuse was rampant. Fear was the chief motivator from dawn to dusk, and permeated the walls, the classrooms and study hall.
One priest at the time was a tyrant who ruled with fear and a leather strap.
We got a reasonable education but at a very high price. Afterwards it was extremely difficult to survive outside the walls. God forgive us all in this country for accepting any kind of abuse in any of our schools.
Just like the industrial schools and Magdalene Laundries, this is also part of of our shameful history we should never forget.
Brian McDevitt
Glenties, Co Donegal
CHECKS AND IMBALANCES
* According to an article in the Irish Independent, the Taoiseach is “planning to set up a high-powered Dail committee to specifically scrutinise legislation after the Seanad is scrapped”.
Government sources were alleged to be “kicking around” the idea that this legislative committee would be composed of TDs and outside experts appointed by the Government, and would operate as a “mini-Seanad” which would “make recommendations and go through . . . legislation line by line” because the “Dail doesn’t do a good enough job scrutinising legislation”.
Is the Government serious? How can it accept that the Dail doesn’t do a good enough job scrutinising legislation but that the Seanad should be replaced by a “mini-Seanad” composed of TDs and non-elected experts? Surely TDs should scrutinise legislation in the Dail like they were elected to?
Also, how can the Government credibly satisfy the public’s desire for more accountability in public life by replacing the upper house with a committee composed of unelected experts with absolutely no democratic mandate similar to the existing Taoiseach’s nominees?
The obvious comment on the Government’s kite-flying exercise, for that is surely what this article is, is that it shows an acceptance that there is a value for a second chamber in the scrutinising of legislation.
Why then not give people a vote for those who sit in that chamber?
Why not open it up rather than close it?
Darren Lehane BL
Suzanne Egan, Lecturer in Law
Co-Chairs of Lawyers for Seanad Reform
PARENTS KNOW BEST
* The early childhood education payment initially given to every family helped enormously to provide for our children.
The Government then thought it wiser to give our children’s money to childcare providers. The Government giveth and the Government taketh away. Add to that the deductions to child benefit, and families are indeed feeling a big pinch financially.
As parents we resisted the free pre-school year, tempting as it was. As a full-time mother with 18 years’ experience, I can confidently say that home is a great place for children.
Is it too much to ask policymakers to stop taking from parents and leave us decide how we want to raise our children?
Mary Moriarty
Rathmines, Dublin 6

Irish Independent:


Still at home

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3 June 2013 Still at home

Off around the park oh dear All the other ships in the harbour have disappeared leave Troutbridge all on her own. Has there been an invasion? Pertwee suspects Little Green men with four head and all blue crew. But is only the fleet review and Troutbridge has been left out to stop her bumping into the other ships

Another quiet day we are both so tired, but manage a little pottering around.
We watch Too Many Crooks about the revenge of a faithfulful on a crooked husband.
I wind at scrabble but get under 400 perhaps Mary can have her revenge tomorrow.

Obituary:

4. ies
Father Andrew Greeley
Father Andrew Greeley, who has died aged 85, was an American Roman Catholic priest and the author of bestselling novels which some considered salacious.

Father Andrew Greeley Photo: GETTY
6:26PM BST 02 Jun 2013
His book The Cardinal Sins, which was published in 1981 with a provocative cover showing a young woman scantily clad in red, is about a curate who rises to archbishop while enjoying affairs, fathering a child and becoming immured in financial scandal.
Greeley was unfazed by the resulting uproar or by the opinion that this was an inappropriate subject for a clerical author. His books were “theological novels” and “comedies of grace”, he maintained, and the sex less explicit than that in the Song of Solomon.
The Cardinal Sins sold more than two million copies. His next novel, Thy Brother’s Wife, was about a priest who falls in love with his sister-in-law.
For the archdiocese of Chicago the books were part of a long list of provocations by a highly turbulent priest, who had earned some respect through his early sociological studies but later exasperated Catholics with his columns in the Sun-Times as well as some 80 other newspapers.
The son of a corporation lawyer, Andrew Moran Greeley was born on February 5 1928. He wanted to become a priest from an early age, and went to St Mary of the Lake seminary at Mundelein, Illinois, where he was ordained and graduated with a licentiate in sacred theology.
His first appointment was as an assistant priest to an Irish parish on Chicago’s Southside. He was then given leave to study Sociology at the University of Chicago, producing a doctoral dissertation about the influence of religion on the career choices of college students . He followed this with a stream of studies, centring on religion, education and ethnicity in America.
After about 10 years, during which he earned a Masters in Sociology, Greeley was recorded in the Catholic Directory as “on special assignment”, and listed as a member of the faculty at the National Opinion Research Centre at the University of Chicago. Neither the archdiocese nor the university was keen to employ him.
He held some of the conventional liberal views of the 1960s and 1970s, approving of contraception, women’s ordination and the right of the faithful to choose their bishops. Yet he criticised those priests and nuns who were more interested in a Marxist victory in Central America than the souls of their own Catholics, and was a supporter of Catholic schools. Although generally a supporter of Vatican II, he dismissed the celebration of the secular as “nonsense” in his Unsecular Man.
He continued to deal with sensitive subjects in his novels. Fall from Grace (1994) was about paedophilia and battered women, and Wages of Sin about the sex lives of senior citizens .
During the 2004 presidential election he wrote an article in the New York Daily News under the headline “Catholics Can Vote for Kerry”. It interpreted a memorandum from Cardinal Ratzinger, the future Pope Benedict XVI, as saying that Catholics could vote for politicians willing to condone abortion in certain circumstances, and drew the wrath of three bishops — one of whom declared: “It is often said by priests and people in [Greeley’s] native Chicago that he long ago published all his thoughts, and in the last decade has been publishing his fantasies.”
Greeley’s reply to all criticisms was that he dealt with the realities of priestly life; human life was not dirty, nasty or immoral, it was a hint of what God’s love is like. Such honesty, he claimed, won him the support of many women, and there was no hint of sexual impropriety in his life. “I suppose I have an Irish weakness for words gone wild,” he said. “Besides, if you’re celibate, you have to do something.”
Earnings from his books enabled him to maintain three homes: an apartment in Chicago; a house in Tucson, Arizona, where he acted as an assistant priest at weekends; and another on Lake Michigan. But he gave away much of his money to Catholic causes .
In his later years, Greeley’s quarrel with Chicago archdiocese faded, until he claimed to be on friendly terms with the archbishop Cardinal Francis George. An academic was said to be working on a comparison between Greeley and Balzac.
He continued to write , producing one series of stories about an auxiliary bishop who is an amateur detective and refers to God as “She”.
Father Andrew Greeley, born February 5 1928, died May 29 2013

Guardian:

When they attack the EU and portray themselves as the patriotic party, Conservatives insist Britain needs to retain or regain control over its own affairs, not least economic decisions. So why are they actively seeking foreign buyers for the Royal Mail (Unthinkable?, 1 June)?
Professor Pete Dorey
Bath 
• Ford fitted a dashboard warning light to my car to show that the doors are not closed. Couldn’t Airbus incorporate the same technology into a $77m Airbus to warn the pilot that the engine cowls have been left open (Report, 1 June)?
Ralph Jones
Rochester, Kent
• When did the standing ovation become de rigeur in the British theatre? Where once it was the volume and duration of the applause that marked the exceptional from the ordinary, it now seems that even the most modest of performances has half the theatre on its feet whooping for more. If we are to mimic the audiences of La Scala et al, I reserve the right to boo.
Tom Challenor
London
• Southern readers, do keep up! “Up north” “pretty” market towns are now “once-bustling” (Letters, 29 May). But don’t despair. They’re “easing” the planning regulations.
Eva Lawrence
St Albans, Hertfordshire
• Why are additions always stunning (In praise of… the Mary Rose, 31 May)?
David Griffiths
Esher, Surrey

By emphasising transparency, accountability and people’s participation in their proposals for new global development goals, the UN high level panel has paved the way for a breakthrough for citizen accountability (Report, 31 May). The focus on improved data and measurable targets will mean that policymakers and citizens will be able to track progress, monitor the delivery of services and hold governments to account. Better access to information will reduce corruption, improve decision-making and allocation of resources, and support good governance. It will also increase vulnerable people’s awareness of their rights and of the services available to them. These are all prerequisites for successful poverty reduction.
The current millennium development goals have delivered enormous education and health benefits. However, the lack of an explicit focus on transparency, accountability and participation is part of the reason why not all of the targets will be met.We are very glad the panel has learnt the lessons from the past and hope their proposals will be adopted by governments and institutions around the world.
Graham Gordon Cafod, Judith Randel Development Initiatives, Gavin Hayman Global Witness, Fredrik Galtung Integrity Action, Carol Priestley Nida (Network for Information & Digital Access), David Hall-Matthews Publish What You Fund, Marinke van Riet Publish What You Pay
• Global governance must also be renewed. Unequal power in the UN security council, World Bank, IMF and other agencies has created a form of global separate development which is more unequal than apartheid South Africa. The G8 must show that good governance applies at all levels.
Titus Alexander
Coordinator, Charter 2020

It is simply wrong of Peter Lilley to state that the European commission is seeking to extend its competence (UK faces court action over EU migrant benefits, 30 May). EU competence on social security law has existed for more than half a century and was within the original treaty signed by the UK when it joined the then EEC. Extensive EU regulations on the matter have sat alongside the treaty provisions for a similar period. The same co-ordination rules also provide us with access to medical treatment through  the European health insurance card and its predecessor, the E111.
This infringement action is not something the commission has rushed into, or of its own initiative. I raised a complaint in 2008 because, in my view, the UK right-to-reside test was in conflict with the rights of EU nationals under the co-ordination rules. Many others from the UK have also raised complaints and the commission is responding. I made the complaint because while working as a welfare rights adviser I witnessed significant numbers of EU nationals faced with the stark choice of working when clearly unable to do so or facing destitution. Many of the cases I advised on involved pregnant women who continued working until days before giving birth, or who had been dismissed in the late stages of pregnancy. Unable to get benefit because of the right-to-reside test, they often had no choice but to return to work only days after giving birth. It was my view that the rules exist specifically to provide protection for migrants in such situations.
Taking infringement proceedings some six years after complaints were made would indicate that the European commission has actually been overly cautious in dealing with those complaints, taking legal action only as an absolutely last resort.
Pamela Fitzpatrick
Director, Harrow Law Centre

Inside the lovely church at Ottery St Mary, in Devon, there is a plaque commemorating a British soldier killed in the Second British-Afghan war in 1879. I was reminded of this by your report (Afghanistan war to cost every household in the UK £2,000, 30 May). The United States has been desperate to involve others in its imperial projects, and the concept of “coalition” was all-too-often a fig-leaf in Iraq and Afghanistan. The most toe-curlingly embarrassing footage pre-Iraq war was that of Tony Blair trying to imitate George Bush’s swagger. In Europe, Blair’s only real supporters were those highly principled leaders Silvio Berlusconi and José María Aznar. 
So British blood and British capital have been wasted in making matters worse in Iraq and Afghanistan, something admitted by many of those involved, military and civilian. It is wrong to always attribute bad motives to those in power, but even if the motives are humanitarian, history should be consulted as to the likely outcomes of military intervention, direct or by proxy. Now we are talking about intervention in Syria, but most would agree that this is exactly why we have a UN – it should not be up to the EU, let alone just Britain and France.
Joseph Cocker
Leominster, Herefordshire
• By offhandedly referring to “Gallic vetoes” in her review of the BBC’s Iraq war documentary (G2, 30 May), Lucy Mangan gives credence to the dishonest narrative Tony Blair peddled about the discussions at the UN security council in the lead-up to the invasion of Iraq.
So while Blair stated on 18 March 2003 that “the French position is that France will vote no, whatever the circumstances”, in actual fact French President Jacques Chirac had said: “My position is that, regardless of the circumstances, France will vote ‘no’ because she considers this evening that there are no grounds for waging war in order to achieve the goal we have set ourselves, ie to disarm Iraq.” Chirac went on to say that France would support military action if the UN weapons inspectors told the security council that Iraq wasn’t cooperating: “It will be for the security council and it alone to decide the right thing to do. But in that case, of course, regrettably, the war would become inevitable. It isn’t today.”
Ian Sinclair
Author, The March That Shook Blair
• John Pilger rightly points to the terrible legacies left in Iraq, some associated with the bombing by the UK and the US in the Gulf war and again in 2003, with depleted uranium (DU) weapons (We’ve moved on from the war. But Iraqis don’t have that choice, 27 May). We have on file letter after letter from the British government denying there have been any problems with use of these radiological and toxic weapons. At the UN in the autumn, the UK was one of only four countries to vote against a resolution advocating a precautionary approach to the use of DU weapons and a call for post-conflict management.There was an overwhelming majority in support of the resolution: 155 states in support, 27 abstainers and the infamous four against: the UK, the US, France and Israel.
DU weapons have to be test-fired, and for years, the UK has been carrying this out in Scotland, from the Dundrennan range into the Solway Firth. Thanks to the work of campaigners, the Ministry of Defence has now announced that it has shelved plans for the testing necessary to extend the life of the UK’s current DU round. But it is time that the government went further and acknowledged the dangers of DU weapons both here in and wherever they were used in the world, most significantly in Iraq.
Rae Street
Campaign Against Depleted Uranium
• Hans Blix challenges Britain to consider whether it is paying £100bn for a Trident upgrade to “protect UK independence or UK pride” (Report, 27 May). It’s probably a third reason: to justify Britain’s permanent seat on the UN security council. No nuclear deterrent: no real reason for the UK to occupy it. Now, that could be a useful referendum question: nuclear subs and a veto in a meeting, or £100bn devoted to wiping out the austerity squeeze?
Andy Day
Beverley, East Yorkshire
• At last, there is a glimmer of understanding about how to get things done (Sleaze returns to damage Tories as MP quits in lobbying scandal, 1 June). If we were to contribute £1 per head to a “lobbying fund”, we could pay every MP and lord £1,000 to support our cause and to prevent reckless intervention in Syria. This is clearly the way forward for democratic policy-making.
Susan Tomes
London

Independent:

+More
The various charities who report that half a million people now depend on food banks seem to believe that if only the Government realises what is happening, it will reverse its welfare cuts.
On the contrary, we need to wake up to the fact that this is all part of Mr Cameron’s idea of the Big Society, in which, just as in our Victorian past, welfare-funding for the lower orders was at the discretion of their more affluent neighbours.
Then there was no significant fiscal-based support for the poor, but merely an obligation on the part of the better-off, as Christians keen to enter the Kingdom of Heaven, to feed the hungry, tend the sick, house the homeless etc.
It is this, the compassion of the giver, whether driven by religious duty or slick conscience-tugging TV adverts, that is to be the mainstay of our future welfare provision, with lower levels of provision coupled with lower direct taxation, which will put available money into the donors’ pockets.
As your report “Hungry Britain” (30 May) points out, Mr Cameron has stated that the increase in food banks is proof that the Big Society is working and his government, with little opposition from Labour, is assessing, through a process of trial and error, just how much state spending on welfare can be replaced by charitable giving. We can expect more cries of alarm from charities as more and more responsibilities are pumped into them until their “pips squeak”.
This is the Tories’ brave new world, “compassionate” in giving, “conservative” in lowering taxes, a system that failed miserably in the past and will condemn millions to penury in the future.
Colin Burke, Manchester
 
Oxfam and Church Action on Poverty are right to produce evidence of destitution in their report, Walking the Breadline. There is no need to create hunger in the UK in order to reduce the deficit. But there is one further recommendation they could have made.
At the heart of growing poverty and inequality is the absence of any coherent affordable housing policy for the past 30 years. Housing benefit increased because landlords profited from increasing demand for rented property in a market in short supply. Instead of curbing rents the Coalition has embarked on slashing housing benefit and leaving claimants to pay rent out of incomes in work and unemployment which are steadily diminishing in value.
Without an affordable housing policy food and fuel poverty will increase; so will the cost of poverty -related ill-health and educational underachievement to the taxpayer.   
The Rev Paul Nicolson, Taxpayers Against Poverty, London N17
 
Muslim anger and the roots of terrorism
I have visited the West Bank, and stayed with Palestinian families living under the control of people who consider them a lesser, or at least “other” racial group. I have never quite been able to express what real bigotry, reinforced by a sense of power, really is. I’m not eloquent enough, and I always thought you have to see it in person to know it.
In regard to Muslim (and liberal lefty) anger, Howard Jacobson (1 June)  says that he “gets it”, and goes on to equate anger against the murderous sanctions against Iraq (perhaps 500,000 dead children before the subsequent invasion, with all the carnage that followed), the similar intentions against Iran and the ongoing brutality against the Palestinians with the belief that Western women have lax morals and The Satanic Verses should be banned.
This is a vile slander that should not be allowed to stand. Opposition to racism and wars of aggression do not equate to opposition to feminism or literature – good or bad.
Qasim Salimi, London SE16
 
Howard Jacobson beautifully exposes the absurdity of blaming ourselves for the radicalisation
of Islamic terrorists. I don’t much care for Saudi, Russian or Chinese foreign or domestic policy, but I have no wish to murder their citizens.
In a democracy an aggrieved minority does not have the right to undermine the parliamentary will of the majority. And this is why British involvement in Iraq or Afghanistan is an intellectually vacuous  way to “explain” terrorism.
Stan Labovitch, Windsor 
 
In the wake of Boston and Woolwich, the Western world braces itself against Muslim extremism and the Islamic community obviously feels vulnerable. Few politicians will focus on a main source of this problem: the active missionary zeal of Saudi wahhabism, financed by black gold. 
After the miseries we Western nations have inflicted on the Middle East we tend to forget that the majority of the 9/11 suicide pilots were Saudis. Many Muslims would abhor this puritanical exaggeration of their religion.  
Fr Christopher Basden, London SW12
 
In her article “Why do Muslims have to keep explaining themselves?” (27 May), I believe Yasmin Alibhai-Brown uses a false analogy. She compares the expectation of condemnation from Muslims of terrorist attacks made in the name of Islam, to asking why white Britons are not asked to condemn the use of drones that massacre innocents. 
These drones are not the fault of “white” Britons but of Britons; she is as complicit as I am, and yes we do both condemn the use of them in our name.
Carol Curtis, Holkham, Norfolk
 
How to curb payday lenders
James Moore in his Outlook column (29 May) observes that there is a simple solution to the problem of payday lenders, namely an interest-rate cap. What a sad reflection on those in power today that, as the headline says, “Regulators and politicians not ready to be courageous and set interest rate cap”.
Many decades ago, the politicians and regulators administering the British colony of Hong Kong had the courage and sense to enact the Moneylenders Ordinance, which made and still makes it a criminal offence to charge an effective rate of interest of more than 60 per cent, and determined that any rate above 48 per cent is prima facie extortionate.
An obvious law to address the excesses of an industry and protect its victims. The failure to introduce such a law in the UK in 2013 leads one to yet again ask the question as to whatever happened to the notion of responsible capitalism.
Nick Eastwell, London SE 10
 
Boots pays its taxes
Simon English’s Outlook piece (30 May) gives the misleading impression that Alliance Boots pays £2m tax on £2bn profit.
Last year we paid £114m tax, of which £64m was paid in UK corporation tax, more than double the previous year. This is even though more than half of our revenue is now generated in countries other than the UK.
Alliance Boots is fully committed to the UK, where we have a large retail pharmacy presence, a pharmaceutical wholesaling business and manufacturing operations. We employ around 70,000 people. In addition to paying corporation, employment, property and sales taxes in the UK, we have contributed over £1bn to our pension funds (which receives tax relief).
Yves Romestan , Director of Group Communications, Alliance Boots, London EC2
 
Driving round the bend
Your review of the Fiesta ST (30 May) is worthy of comment. You may think you have covered yourselves by advising that it is driven within the speed limit, but you are certainly advocating that it can be driven in a dangerous, irresponsible and reckless manner by suggesting that driving it at high “legal speeds down a bendy B-road” is OK.
This sort of macho review, straight from the Jeremy Clarkson school of motoring, has no place in The Independent. You are just boys who have been given toys to play with.
You may believe that anti-lock brakes and air bags will get you out of trouble, but that will be no consolation to the cyclist or horse rider just around the bend. You should not be encouraging such hooliganism.
Bob Stephens, Bovey Tracey, Devon
 
Long massacre of our wildlife
Patricia Lloyd (letter, 31 May) may be relieved to know that, contrary to what Michael McCarthy asserts (30 May), the decline in British wildlife began well before the advent of the baby boomers. 
The State of Nature report says: “It is well accepted that there were considerable (albeit largely unquantified) declines in the UK’s wildlife prior to the last 50 years, linked to habitat loss.”  The loss of British wildlife over the past decades has indeed been dreadful, but invoking the baby boomer myth yet again is misleading and unhelpful. It’s up to all of us to act more responsibly, regardless of our date of birth.
Lesley Riddle, London SW6
 
Range of opinion
Ben Chu’s article of 30 May told us that the OECD gave its backing to the Coalition’s deficit reduction schedule, that the IMF recommended the UK put its deficit reduction programme on pause, and that the European Commission advised that the Coalition should speed up its cuts to bring down the deficit. I wonder which of these authorities Ed Balls and David Blanchflower will call upon next in support of their critique of Government economic policy.
Nick Collier, London N5
 
Transported
The correspondence about “actress” and other gendered job titles reminds me that in the 1960s I was working at a girls’ secondary school in Sheffield. The day after Barbara Castle was appointed to  be in charge of transport, the head announced in assembly: “Girls, I know that you will be delighted that we have a Ministress of Transport.”
David Battye, Sheffield
 
Rape is rape
Is it time that men and boys learnt that, as with goods at a self-service shop, just because it’s on display doesn’t mean you can take it? Enough of blaming women for (some) men’s inability to know when to stop (letter, 30 May)
Sue Thomas, Bowness on Windermere, Cumbria
 
Hateful
Nick Griffin and his supporters paraded outside Parliament on Saturday waving BNP placards proclaiming “HATE PREACHERS OUT”. Has nobody told them about irony? Or hypocrisy?
Martin Wallis, Shipdham, Norfolk

Times:

History suggests that religion has done more good than the harm that irreligious ideologies did in the 20th century alone
Sir, Philip Collins should be congratulated for his deconstruction of the pathology of identity (“Muslim or otherwise, we are more than a label”, Opinion, May 31). However, his assertion that “religion poisons everything” is part of the same problem of absolutising what is clearly conditional and relative. In the Christian faith identity is indeed relative, secondary and transient and, as St Paul says, even sex and gender become null and void in Christ. What might sound like a pious platitude to scepticism and unbelief veils a profound theological insight that our membership of the community of the faithful is a privilege conferred on us by the grace of divine forgiveness. To call this a poison seems perverse.
Paul Thomson
Knutsford, Cheshire
Sir, Philip Collins approves Christopher Hitchens’s dictum, that religion poisons everything. It would be more correct to say that ideology poisons everything. The central Christian principle is to love all human beings equally — doing otherwise neglected principle. But when non-religious ideologies treat some human beings — black people, aristocrats, unborn babies, capitalists — as less than equal it is in line with their actual principles.
Human beings have to believe in something. History suggests that, primitive paganisms apart, religion has always done far more good than the harm that irreligious ideologies did in the 20th century alone. Principle, not Philip Collins’s “persuasive excuse”.
Tom McIntyre
Frome, Somerset
Sir, I am British, Asian, Indian, Burmese, liberal and no less a Muslim. I very much welcome Philip Collins’s comments on the dangers of the “over-identification with a single aspect of life”; this is divisive to a cohesive liberal society, and is not just the fuel for terrorism.
We need to move away from policies such as Prevent which have focused on countering terrorist values by concentrating purely on people’s Muslim identities. Policies should be more inclusive, so that being a Muslim is not exclusive but inclusive of other parts of one’s identity. We should avoid trying to pigeonhole citizens — rather, we should allow them to express themselves without feeling that this impinges on their ability to be British.
Yusuf Tai
Associate Fellow, Institute for Statecraft
Sir, Single-issue fanatics are almost always deluded and potentially dangerous, whatever their persuasion — religious or otherwise.
Jonathan Baldock
Kew, Surrey

If the reforms go through as intended, the reduction in legal aid will distort the judicial review process out of all recognition
Sir, We write to highlight the attack on the fundamental rule of law which is being made by the Government. No government likes its activities to be declared unlawful by the courts, but not until now has any government sought to substantially remove the right of the citizen to have the legality of the State’s actions held up to scrutiny.
The Government’s proposal to remove legal aid for judicial review cases before they are given permission to proceed by a judge will have two dramatic effects. Justifying the proposals with the argument that only the minority of judicial reviews succeed, Chris Grayling, the Justice Secretary, omitted to mention that about 2,600 of the 4,000 legally aided judicial reviews are settled each year before a judge considers them.
These successes are achievable because people can instruct lawyers to put arguments that bring public authorities to their senses. But if the proposals are implemented a great many of these people will be denied access to justice altogether because there will be no payment for this work.
The second effect will be to ensure mediation, negotiation and thoughtful exchanges of correspondence will be things of the past. When cases are litigated, lawyers will have to be single-minded about reaching the point where they might be paid.
None of this can have escaped the Government’s attention. We do not accept that cost-saving is the main intention of these proposals. Their effect will be to prevent the courts from scrutinising decisions of agencies such as the Home Office which repeatedly act unlawfully.
The rule of law in relation to the actions of the State will be dominated by the concerns of the rich. Decisions on hospital closures, policies about the disabled, the elderly, and education or health reforms will be made without concern that they could be challenged.
We are writing as the firms identified in the legal press as the top claimant public law firms to make it absolutely clear that if the reforms go through as intended, the reduction in legal aid will distort the judicial review process out of all recognition.
Access to justice for many will become impractical. This constitutionally vital aspect of access to justice and the rule of law will wither.
John Halford, Bindmans Solicitors
Jamie Beagent, Leigh Day Solicitors
Simon Creighton, Bhatt Murphy Solicitors
Polly Glynn Deighton, Pierce Glynn Solicitors
Phil Shiner, Public Interest Lawyers
Daniel Machover, Hickman Rose Solicitors
Yogi Amin, Irwin Mitchell Solicitors

With expensive care home bills to pay for long-lived parents should readers be concerned that their own dotage may be spent in penury?
Sir, I was pleased to read that the risk of cancer is lower if your parents live a long life (report, May 31). My grandmother lived to 102 and my mother is 95. However, my mother lives in a residential home and has done for the past nine years. The fees are currently £42,000 a year and are funded by my mother and myself.
While I rejoice at the prospect that I am less likely to get cancer or suffer from strokes or diabetes, I am not convinced that my finances will remain in a healthy state as I am unlikely to inherit any money at all from my mother.
M. H. Brodie
Swindon

A majority of the public now supports same-sex marriage, and legislatures around the world are reflecting this change of attitude
The Marriage (Same Sex Couples) Bill will be debated in the House of Lords today. We believe it is right to open up marriage to loving and committed same sex couples, and that this important institution will be strengthened by the change. The Bill rightly enshrines the principle of religious freedom, protecting those faith groups that do not wish to conduct same-sex marriages, but allowing others to do so if they wish.
Parliament has intervened to redefine the scope of marriage over the past three centuries. A majority of the public now supports same-sex marriage, and legislatures around the world are reflecting this change of attitude. The elected House of Commons passed this Bill on a free vote by more than a two to one cross-party majority. The House of Lords should consider this legislation carefully, but it would be wrong to hinder a measure whose time has come.
Lord Fowler
Lord Jenkin of Roding
Lord Hunt of Wirral
Lord Deben
Baroness Bottomley of Nettlestone
Lord Garel-Jones Sir,
Conservative Peers have every reason to oppose this Bill and vote it down at second reading. First, the central precept of the Bill stands in stark contradiction to the central Conservative commitment to marriage, family and children.
Second, the aggressive and manipulative manner in which this Bill has been pushed through, especially with such contempt for freedom of conscience and religion, is alien to long-held Conservative values and democratic principles.
Third, this Bill is politically toxic for the Conservative Party. Not only has it alienated the grassroots activists from the leadership but it is driving our traditional voters elsewhere while failing to draw in many new ones.
Robert Woollard, chairman, Conservative Grassroots, and former chairman, Wycombe Conservative Association; Guy Hordern, former chairman, Birmingham Ladywood Conservative Association; Ed Costelloe, former chairman, Somerton & Frome Conservative Association; Cllr Mary Douglas, Salisbury Conservative Association; Cllr Delyth Miles, chairman, Clacton Conservative Association; Geoffrey Vero, president, Surrey Heath Conservative Association

A reader’s father must have been one of very few to receive Coronation Medals from the Coronations of both George VI and Elizabeth II
Sir, The Diamond Jubilee of the Coronation reminds me that my father, the late Major H. G. Humberston, Royal Fusiliers, had what must surely be the rare distinction of having been awarded two Coronation Medals.
The first was for participating in the procession at the Coronation of George VI in 1937. The second, presented to him when he was Quartermaster of the Army Apprentices School in Harrogate, was one of very few coronation medals (three, I believe) allocated to each unit of the Armed Forces.
Professor J.W. Humberston
Epping, Essex

Telegraph:

SIR – As we celebrate the Jubilee of the Queen’s coronation, it is worth remembering that during her reign there have been times when the Royal Family has come in for criticism. But never the Queen.
Having reigned for so long after coming to the throne at such a young age, she has never risked being a hostage to fortune by expressing her opinions publicly. She has thus been able to meet all conditions and types of people throughout the Commonwealth and the world.
She has given counsel to prime ministers and world leaders who knew that whatever they confided to her would never be divulged. There is no man or woman who can match this diplomatic record.
John Lidstone
Fleet, Hampshire
SIR – As head of the Church of England our monarch presides over an organization
that undoubtedly has falling support. On the other hand, as the leader of the British nation, the monarch rules over and enjoys the support of an
increasingly diverse people of all faiths and none. How fitting therefore that our new Archbishop has suggested that all Christian denominations and
representatives other faiths should play a part in the coronation of any
future monarch (report, May 19).
Duncan Rayner
Sunningdale, Berkshire

SIR – I have written to the Prime Minister in response to his letter to me on behalf of Conservative Grassroots to express our deep concern about the negative effect of the gay marriage Bill on both Conservative Party morale and electoral appeal. It is alienating much of our core support while
failing to attract new voters with under two years to go before the general election.
There is no solid evidence to support the Prime Minister’s claim that “from what the evidence tells us, the vast majority of public opinion agrees”. Polling data shows just how divided both the country and the party are.
Conservatives have always been at the forefront of innovation, development and growth but success has always hinged on recognising the enduring value of the fundamental institutions of society, marriage and family.
The Prime Minister believes that “enabling same–sex couples to get married will strengthen – not weaken – family ties, helping to ensure that marriage remains an essential building block of our society“. In fact, all the evidence from countries that have introduced this legislation over the last ten years shows that marriage is further devalued in the eyes of all and the tie between marriage and bringing up of children is seriously weakened.
Related Articles
Discretion has been the secret of the Queen’s success
02 Jun 2013
The Prime Minister also states that, since this is a “conscience issue”, he would never put pressure on Parliamentary colleagues to vote against their conscience. Doing a shabby deal with Labour to get the Bill through the Commons and reports of coercion combined with the Government’s voting down of every proposed conscience amendment does not sound at all like “a free vote on a matter of conscience” and is inconsistent with Conservative principles.
Long-serving party members – many of whom have had the responsibility of bringing up children themselves – believe that the family lies at the heart of Conservative values. The golden inheritance of every previous generation, that has been lovingly handed down to us, is now being smashed on the anvil of “equality and fairness”. Is this the “new intolerance”? We sincerely hope that the Lords will take a more objective view of this misguided legislation, transcend party politics, uphold our constitutional processes, defend our freedoms – and reject the Bill.
Robert Woollard
Chairman, Conservative Grassroots
Marlow, Buckinghamshire
SIR – There was inadequate time to debate the critical issues of this Bill in the Commons – a maximum of four minutes per MP during the Second Reading, and a two-and-a-half hour debate at the more recent stage.
Nick Herbert MP claims that peers in the Lords will not want to be out of step with changing attitudes. But changing attitudes do not mean more sensible ones, or that it would be irresponsible for the Lords to make an independent judgment.
The readiness of the three party leaders to support a measure for which there was no manifesto commitment, and therefore no mandate, is a disgrace. Hopefully, the Lords will speak up for democracy, and throw out the Bill, thus enabling a genuine democratic debate to take place at the next election.
Bob Wright
London NW2
SIR – Conservatives who voted for the Marriage (Same-Sex Couples) Bill failed to follow the principle articulated by Edmund Burke, the philosophical founder of conservatism, that society is “a partnership not only between those who are living, but between those who are dead, and those who are to be born.”
They insult the honour paid to traditional marriage by our forebears. They disdain the rights of the living, who have been denied a chance to vote on manifesto commitments.
They betray the unborn by promoting an irreversible and profound shift in our moral understanding and social relations. Burke reminded those in power that they “act in trust” and are answerable for that trust to the “one great master, author and founder of society.”
Giles Mercer
Bath, Somerset
Preventing funding for extremist groups
SIR – Andrew Gilligan’s excellent article on “lone wolves” (Gilligan on Sunday, May 26) clearly highlights the inherent danger of providing public funding for certain Islamic or extremist groups.
The Government must now insist that directors, officers or trustees of these groups (and indeed any group that receives public funding) must sign personal guarantees to the effect that funding given will only be used to achieve the stated aim on the application.
Where there is a deviation, the guarantees must then be called with the responsible individuals becoming liable to repay the public purse. I wonder how many of these groups are ever properly audited?
George Morgan-Grenville
Cirencester, Gloucestershire
SIR – They say that devil makes work for idle hands. Perhaps if the Government cut off hate preacher Anjem Choudary’s benefits of £25,000 per annum he would have a bit less time to corrupt the minds of vulnerable young people?
Ted Shorter
Hildenborough, Kent
Britain’s energy future
SIR – Maureen O’Connor (Letters, May 26) asks “Will we see trains stranded between stations due to power cuts?”
If we continue to demonise carbon dioxide and invest in renewable energy, yes we will. There will be power failures due to lack of wind or sunshine. We need new fossil fuel and nuclear power stations like those being built elsewhere in the world.
Even Germany is building coal-fired power stations. Energy in America is now half of the price that it is here because of shale gas.
Thomas Sayers
Easington, North Yorkshire
SIR – Unless the Coalition Government revises its catastrophic energy policies, in addition to the lights going out in four years time, we could have the situation whereby HS2 will only be able to run when the wind blows.
What would W S Gilbert have made of it all?
John S Moxham
Prestwood, Buckinghamshire
Guards for Farage
SIR – When Ukip’s leader, Nigel Farage disclosed that, following his treatment at the hands of Scottish nationalist yobs, he has now been forced for the first time to engage bodyguards (report, May 26), he did not say who is paying for them.
If the Prime Minister’s bodyguard is paid for by the state, may we assume that Mr Farage’s status as an MEP entitles his bodyguard to be funded by the EU?
Richard Shaw
Dunstable, Bedfordshire
Train to safety
SIR – Lucy Ward’s interviews (Features, May 26) with several Jewish people who travelled on the Kindertransport as children made for me, as one of the succeeding generation, essential reading.
Their stories are similar to that of my mother, Lili Weissman. She had to travel from Vienna’s Westbahnhof on August 1 1939 on the last Kindertransport train provided.
Her father, Heinrich, was murdered in Buchenwald on December 12 1939. Her mother, Anna, and her younger brother, Heinz, were killed at Sobibor in June 1942.
It is something to be grateful for, that this country provided a new home for the 10,000 Jewish children. My mother was to work as a Land Girl within a day of arrival at London Liverpool Street, and like so many others had to learn a new language.
Rev Robert Weissman
London E18
In defence of red kites
SIR – Paul Sargeantson’s attitude towards red kites (Letters, May 26) is precisely the sort of misconception that resulted in the decimation of their population in the 19th century.
Red kites were once common in Britain and even scavenged on London’s streets. Unfortunately the kite’s tolerance of humans made it an easy target for those with shooting interests.
The persecution of a native species in order to preserve imported gamebirds is a peculiarly British irony. Although the diet of the current kite population has been shown to include pheasants, they are almost entirely scavenged carcasses, many of them road victims or killed by disease.
As for the decline in our songbirds, I’m afraid he can’t pin that on the kite too. Scientists have attributed this to the intensification of farming, the consequent loss of meadows and hedgerows, increased pesticide use, building development and climate change.
Ed Hutchings
Stoke-by-Nayland, Essex
Don’t judge a book…
SIR – Novelist Lionel Shriver complains of publishers putting pink “’chick-lit’-style” covers on “serious works by female authors” (“Pink book covers ‘insult to women’”, report, May 26).
No doubt publishers are aiming to avoid causing unnecessary confusion to female readers, an approach that one would have thought Ms Shriver, a female author with a man’s name, would appreciate.
Ann Farmer
Woodford Green, Essex

Irish Times:

Sir, – I was typing the word Dail into my smartphone when it “corrected” the word to Fail. I reckon it’s far more than a smartphone, it’s a knowledgeablephone. – Yours, etc,
CONAN DOYLE,
Pococke Lower,

First published: Mon, Jun 3, 2013, 00:11

   
Sir, – We wish to register our dismay at the prospect that Civic, Social and Political Education (CSPE) will be removed as a compulsory State examinable subject in the new junior cycle curriculum.
At present every Junior Certificate student in the State studies this subject which has at its core an exploration of the meaning and application of active citizenship in society grounded in an understanding of international human rights.
We are aware that the NCCA is formulating a similar, but optional short course, to replace the present CSPE course. Further to this, we understand that completion of the proposed new Junior Certificate requires cognisance of associated statements of learning which demand, for example, that students “value what it means to be an active citizen with rights and responsibilities in local and wider contexts”. However, we believe the current provision of citizenship education is superior.
At present every child is afforded the same opportunity to engage in a syllabus based on the following seven concepts: human dignity, human rights and responsibility, stewardship, understanding of development in society, democracy, law, and interdependence. It includes an externally assessed State exam (40 per cent) as well as the completion of an action project (60 per cent) which has been innovative, beneficial, popular with students and regarded well internationally.
The possibility will exist under the new proposals for citizenship and human rights education to be delivered in a cross-curricular and piece-meal fashion. Available research from the UK has shown this to be less than satisfactory.
As pointed out in by the Irish Commission for Human Rights in a report in 2012, “the re-designation of CSPE as a non-compulsory subject means that there would be no mandatory citizenship education available to all students for the first time since 1966”.
Ireland has an obligation to provide human rights education as a result of various United Nations Conventions to which the Irish State is a party.
For these reasons we feel the Junior Certificate proposals are a retrograde step, which will remove equality of opportunity in regard to human rights and citizenship education in the Irish education system. We therefore would call on the Government to reverse this decision. – Yours, etc,
JEANNE BARRETT,
Chairperson,
Association of Civic, Social

Sir, – It seems the National Children’s Hospital is not now likely to be completed before 2019 at the earliest, ie, in six years’ time, at a projected cost of €600 million.
Each year, the National Lottery gives away more than €200 million to good causes. Six times €200 million equals €1,200 million. In other words, more than twice the cost of the hospital.
If the Government reserves only half of what it disburses each year, into a fund specifically for the children’s hospital, it can easily pay for the hospital while still retaining full control of a valuable asset and continuing to have some funding for other good causes. After only six years, full funding would again be available for worthy causes.
This seems to be a better solution than selling off the rights to the Lottery for 20 years to a private agency for profit. – Yours, etc,
DAVID DORAN
Royal Oak Road,

   
Sir, – On the final day for local property tax registration, two non-resident Irish companies (AMPI and ALVE) announce that, despite each reporting profits of more than €1 billion, no tax is due (“Two Abbott subsidiaries with €1bn plus profits paid no tax”, May 28th).
What perfect timing.
Without their exemptions these non-resident entities would have paid €374 million corporation tax: the maximum yield from the 1.66 million property-tax payers in a full year will be €400 million (“Tax will not prove major revenue raiser for the State”, May 28th). – Yours, etc,
Dr JOHN DOHERTY,

Sir, – After the Senate, we could save hundreds of millions by abolishing the Army? If it cannot protect one tanker of diesel what hope for the country? — Yours, etc,
BREDA CLARKE,
Crannagh Road,

Irish Independent:

Madam –I am not surprised by the attacks following John Crown’s article (Sunday Independent, May 19, 2013). In many ways Mr Crown is the lay equivalent of the arrogance and conceit that he rails so much against in the Catholic Church. This is a pity because it deflects from his central argument that the Catholic hierarchy is trying to mount a coup against the democratically elected government. Talks of potential excommunications against politicians who vote the ‘wrong way’ in upcoming ‘abortion legislation’ is undemocratic.
Also in this section
Media furthers homegrown myth
‘Cowardly’ label unfair
Adios, Matthew
The disgraceful way in which our Taoiseach was treated in Boston should be widely condemned and is another example of Catholic arrogance. Such disrespect happening in Boston is an even greater irony when one realises that its former cardinal Bernard Law is now a refugee from American justice in Vatican City. The charge against him is that he did nothing to prevent sexual abuse against children in his diocese.
Letter writers to your paper describe themselves as Catholics whose faith has been insulted by Mr Crown’s article. They write in irritation demanding apologies. I, on the other hand, am a Christian and found the central argument of Mr Crown’s article persuasive. I would add however that in Mr Crown’s future correspondence with the Sunday Independent, he should be a little more sensitive to the sensibilities of the Catholic church who see power slipping from their hands slowly but surely day by day.
Michael Clemenger,
Trim, Co Meath
CREDIT DUE FOR TAOISEACH’S STAND
Madam –John Crown’s piece entitled “A thoroughly Irish coup” hit the nail squarely on the head, which is why it drew a hail of anti-letters on your issue of May 26.
It is amazing that we have a declared republic since 1948 and that still many Irish citizens think we should be effectively ruled by the Vatican. Rule by any religion defines a country as a theocracy which is no relation to a republic.
It shows the power of religious brainwashing when people can be so intellectually confused they regard such polar opposites as compatible.
It is to Enda Kenny’s credit that he is the first ever Taoiseach to stand up to the might of the Vatican. Some former Fine Gael leaders were abject in their servility to the Church.
Paddy Phelan,
Ballymacarbry, Co Waterford
KUDOS FOR IFSC GO TO DESMOND?
Madam – Dermot Desmond is described as “widely” considered to have been the person behind the IFSC (Sunday Independent, May 26, 2013).
Bearing in mind the IFSC was one of the great recent achievements of the Irish State, why is only “widely” used as it appears to cast some doubt?
Was Mr Desmond the person behind the IFSC or not?
Surely documents of the IDA, and other related State bodies, must be available in order to determine the genesis of the IFSC if the term “widely” does not give Mr Desmond the credit he actually deserves?
John R Kane,
Bermuda
UNEMPLOYED HAVE NO VOICE
Madam – I cannot believe the naivety of Eilis O’Hanlon in her article entitled ‘radiator man’ where she found it “odd” that the chap who locked himself to a radiator got such a hard time from the public on Liveline.
Did she honestly think that this unemployed man was treated fairly or impartially or that this was a fair representation of public opinion on the property tax?
How fortunate the Suffragettes and Gandhi were that Liveline wasn’t around for their peaceful protests. The unemployed in Ireland have no voice and it is no wonder that they have to resort to this to be heard.
E R Corcoran,
Clonsilla, Dublin 15
A BIG WELCOME BACK FOR FLORENCE
Madam –How pleased I was to see Florence Horsman-Hogan, again submitting articles to the Sunday Independent! I really missed them. They are so applicable to all of us and to living life and its consequences in the truest sense. Please continue. You made my day!
Patricia Ryan,
Thurles, Co. Tipperary.
BETTER LISTEN TO COLM MCCARTHY
Madam – It is great to read Colm McCarthy write a bit of sense on the ‘Ireland is a tax haven’ allegations (Sunday Independent, May 26, 2013). He stated that there is “no evidence whatsoever… that multinationals operating here are in breach of Irish or any other tax laws”.
This statement is especially important since many jobs in the Irish economy are at stake.
Also, as Mr McCarthy himself says, the Irish media, as well as opposition politicians, seem to have swallowed the line put out by international spin doctors in the US and Europe that Ireland is indeed a tax haven.
Colm McCarthy has unrivalled credibility in this area since he has being challenging conventional wisdom and various bandwagons for years.
As far back as 2002 he wrote that, due to the fact that the republic had lost control over its exchange rate, the management of the Irish economy back then was “unsustainable”.
If the powers that be had listened to him back then we might have been spared our present troubles.
Anyway I hope Colm McCarthy continues to say what is right as he sees it. But I am afraid that, as in 2002, too many will not want to hear.
A Leavy,
Sutton, Dublin 13
CRECHE ISSUES ARE COMPLEX
Madam – I want to congratulate Brendan O’Connor on the article on creches and the RTE Prime Time investigation (Sunday Independent, May 26, 2013). We have had many calls in the National Women’s Council of Ireland from mothers talking about their concerns and worries. His article brought together so many of those views and also that the issues raised are complex and not helped by knee jerk reactions. The NWCI has been campaigning for publicly subsidised childcare as we believe it is the only way to ensure high quality and affordable childcare in Ireland.
I also have a three-year-old in creche and found myself nodding to all your words, as I am sure did many mothers and fathers. Well done
Orla O’Connor, Director,
National Women’s Council of Ireland, Dublin 1
TAKES COURAGE TO ASK FOR HELP
Madam –I would like to thank Alan O’Mara for his article about his experience with depression (Sunday Independent, May 26, 2013). I was so impressed with his honesty and courage to speak out. As a therapist and a volunteer with Jigsaw Galway in the West of Ireland, I found the article proved just how young men can come to terms with feelings of low mood and seek help. Mental health does not necessarily mean a diagnosis or medication, it may mean you just want to talk to someone and – most importantly – be listened to. We get so caught up within ourselves that it is difficult to see anything else and that is where the advantages of counselling services lie.
I just hope other young males and females recognise that it takes more courage to ask for help than to struggle alone.
Eimear Connaughton,
Galway
PRINCE CHARLES IS SON OF THE DUKE
Madam – Re: Quotes Of The Week (Sunday Independent, May 26, 2013). Please note that Prince Charles is not the Duke of Edinburgh.
SM Adamson,
Celbridge, Co Kildare
Thanks for spotting that. Prince Charles is the Prince of Wales. His father, Prince Phillip, is the Duke of Edinburgh.
Letters Editor


Book group

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4 June 2013 Book Group

Off around the park oh dear oh dear The sealord wants to inspect the fleet and the flagship has broken down. Troutbridge is the only one left. But she too has engine trouble so the Sealord is off to inspect the fleetin Nunky’s tug, Priceless.
Another quiet day off out to see Joan and pay June her wages, Mary is out to her book group.
We watch The Pallisers nit bad bit of an info dump at the beginning but handled nicely
I win at scrabble but get under 400 perhaps Mary can have her revenge tomorrow.

Obituary:

Margaret Jackson
Margaret Jackson, who has died aged 96, was entrusted with many of Britain’s wartime secrets in her role as principal secretary to the Director-General of Special Operations Executive (SOE), Brigadier (later Major-General Sir) Colin Gubbins.

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Margaret Jackson 
6:24PM BST 03 Jun 2013
In 1940 Margaret Jackson was working for the Royal Institute of International Affairs when she was interviewed by Gubbins. He was looking for a French-speaking secretary and she joined him in Paris, where he headed the mission to liaise with resistance groups run by the Polish and Czech authorities in exile.
In Paris she was a secretary to No 4 Military Mission before being recruited to Military Intelligence Research (MIR), a small department of the War Office. After the German breakthrough, on June 17, with the French surrender imminent, she escaped from St Malo on a hospital ship and got back to England.
In London, having reported to MIR, she was told that Gubbins had been directed to form the Auxiliary Units, a clandestine civilian force which would operate behind German lines if Britain were invaded. She worked for him first in Whitehall and then at a country house in Wiltshire.
Promising recruits were found in the Home Guard and organised into patrols. They were trained in the use of explosives, including Molotov cocktails. Specially prepared hide-outs were found in woods and farm buildings, and Margaret Jackson personally took a hand in selecting these for members of the units.
In November, Gubbins was seconded to SOE, which had recently been established to wage guerrilla warfare in Nazi-occupied countries and, in Churchill’s words, to “set Europe ablaze”. Priority was given to cutting enemy communications and subverting their morale. After paramilitary training, students completed a parachute course at Ringway (now Manchester airport). Selected agents might then be sent to learn sabotage techniques or to be trained as radio operators. In early 1941 a group of so-called “finishing schools” was set up in the New Forest to provide general training in clandestine operations.
SOE had its headquarters in Baker Street. Having outgrown two gloomy family flats in an apartment building, it moved to a modern office block. In the autumn of 1940 and the winter of 1940-41, everyone was working almost around the clock, and many of the staff slept in their offices. All had cover stories to match the work that they were doing, and the necessity to keep the organisation secret made it very difficult to take on new recruits.
When Gubbins and Margaret Jackson first arrived, there was not a single radio set operating in Occupied Europe. By the summer and autumn of 1941, however, more than 60 agents had been dispatched to north-west Europe, nearly half of them to France.
Gubbins was proving to be the linchpin of the organisation, and in November his responsibilities were widened: French, Belgian, Dutch, German and Austrian sections were added to the Polish and Czech sections for which he was already responsible.
Margaret Jackson’s already heavy workload increased correspondingly. Her role was to coordinate the work of the senior secretaries who had to wrestle with multiple carbon copies and manual typewriters. With large bundles of telegrams being the lifeblood of the organisation, she sifted and annotated them for Gubbins, who would read them and pass them on to section heads. Security was a priority. Posters on the wall warned against careless talk and the danger of informers. Every night papers had to be locked up or shredded, and diaries and blotters removed. In September 1943 Gubbins became executive head of SOE, and Margaret Jackson regarded him as a born leader. For his part, he was not afraid to delegate responsibility to her and to other members of his very competent staff; he would not countenance any form of discrimination against women.
SOE had to survive setbacks, mistakes, betrayals, intrigues and constant efforts to remove its independence. The battle with Whitehall for scarce resources was, at times, almost as fierce as the fight with the Germans. The “Baker Street Irregulars” were, however, buoyed up by an unshakeable conviction that eventually the war would be won.
Margaret Wallace Jackson was born in London to Scottish parents on January 15 1917 and was brought up in Argentina, where her father was in business. She was educated at home by a governess until the age of 13, when she was sent to a Methodist school in England, where the family returned to live after her father’s death in 1934.
When SOE was disbanded in 1946, Margaret Jackson was appointed MBE. She joined the Allied Commission for Austria in Vienna and took notes at the quadripartite meetings. She subsequently joined the Organisation of European Economic Co-operation in Paris and worked as its deputy secretary for about four years.
Margaret Jackson believed that many in Britain underestimated the miracle of Franco-German reconciliation. She was a passionate advocate of European unity and reconstruction, and regarded this period of her life as immensely satisfying.
She returned to England in 1952 and, having joined the Foreign Office, was posted to Melbourne in Australia as an information officer. There she became involved in Moral Re-Armament, a movement that was gaining traction among dockside workers at a time of considerable industrial strife.
When she was told to sever her association with MRA on the ground that she was dabbling in politics, she refused; the matter was dropped, but she subsequently resigned and returned to England. Back in London, she worked in a number of secretarial jobs, including nine years as PA to the secretary of the Malaysian Natural Rubber Producers’ Research Association. For eight years she served as a Conservative councillor for the London borough of Southwark.
She retired to a Methodist home at Croydon. The Imperial War Museum has a recording of an interview that she gave about her time with SOE.
Margaret Jackson was unmarried. One of her three sisters, Patricia, married Sir Patrick Dean, British Ambassador to the UN (1960-64) and to the United States (1965-69); another, Elisabeth, was the wife of Lord Roskill, the Law Lord.
Margaret Jackson, born January 15 1917, died June 2 2013

Guardian:

The unstated story about Apple and taxes (How one Irish woman made $22bn for Apple, 29 May) is the problem of determining where value accrues in a digital transaction. If I import a novel in a country that charges duty, VAT or sales tax, the postal service may intercept it and charge me the taxes. If I buy a digital edition, it arrives via the internet and I pay no taxes. Traditional models of corporate tax, sales taxes, VAT and duties no longer apply. While some may castigate Apple for taking maximum advantage of the failure of tax codes to keep up, they have at least alerted us to the problem, and it’s potentially fixable, if with significant effort. I am disappointed that Apple has played this game to the extent it has, though the company still has a long way to go to be as ethically compromised as other similarly large multinationals.
Philip Machanick
Rhodes University, Grahamstown, South Africa
• One of the greatest benefits the modern state provides international companies, such as Apple and Google, is the protection of their intellectual property rights. These are monopoly rights to exploit a given piece of intellectual property by preventing others from using it in competition. It is against the law for a competitor to sell an exact copy of an iPhone. This is responsible for the huge profits that these companies are able to make, as evidenced by the royalty charges these companies make to their UK subsidiaries. Even a company selling coffee claims it is worth over 5% of its turnover. In Victorian times, companies paid the government for the rights to exploit a monopoly. The present government is now giving tax breaks for the development of intellectual property via its R&D tax credit. Now is the time for the government to start taxing the profits that arise from the exploitation of them. A first step could be to stop allowing companies to treat them as a tax-deductible expense in order to move money abroad to tax havens.
Nick Bion
Reading, Berkshire

It is disappointing that in your article on council allotments (The plot thickens, 1 June) John Harris chooses to deride Watford borough council’s plans for the town’s most ambitious regeneration project in decades. He chooses instead to focus on the emotional and subjective feelings of the 70 or so allotment holders who will be displaced by the project and have to move to alternative council allotment sites in the town. At the same time, he dismisses the major social benefits the project will bring to the residents of the town and the surrounding area with a sarcastic “all mouth-wateringly close to the M25″.
These benefits are an upgraded state-of-the-art acute hospital, much needed housing, including a substantial element of social housing, and regenerated infrastructure for business developments, leading to more jobs. This is an imaginative and ambitious project whereby the council will, for the long-term benefit of its residents, be releasing the inherent capital value of a large site in its ownership, which at the moment is largely derelict. At a time when everybody, including the Guardian, is urging the government to support economic recovery with more capital spending, particularly on social housing, it seems perverse not to recognise the good faith of Watford council and its Liberal Democrat administration in its efforts.
Those of us who choose to take on the responsibility of local government decision-making know that in the real world there are few no-brainers and that most items for decision involve the careful weighing of the arguments for and against, and finding the right balance. The press, particularly the so-called broadsheets, have a responsibility to resist knee-jerk responses like John Harris’s to the Farm Terrace allotment issue.
Cllr George Derbyshire
Lib Dem, Watford borough council
• I read with interest John Harris’s article on the issues councils face in providing land for growing food. In Waltham Forest we have just launched our community food-growing scheme with the aim of becoming the urban food-growing borough of London.
This scheme will see the creation of over 100 new plots for food-growing this year alone. Large allotment plots will be reduced in size to create more allotments for residents and we’re looking at creative ways to grow indoors, on windowsills or in smaller gardens and flowerbeds. We’re also working to create networks that support “grow your own”, such as garden-share schemes, and through our libraries we will provide better access to food-growing books, advice on what vegetables are in demand and on growing food to sell. We will also explore opportunities for jobs and training, such as the £100,000 we recently secured for apprenticeships with local food producer Organic Lea.
While I recognise the financial issues, I think there is a strong argument to persuade other councils to follow our lead. Food-growing can save residents money and add to the local economy; it can have a considerable impact on the environment; and with local authorities taking on public health responsibilities, it can help people stay fit and healthy, and improve their diet. It also provides people with a greater connection to where they live and, I would argue, contributes to their levels of happiness.
Cllr Clyde Loakes
Lab, cabinet member for environment, Waltham Forest borough council

Energy secretary Ed Davey is right to warn of the massive gamble we’ll be taking with the future of our planet if we fail to tackle climate change (Planned energy bill ‘will destroy green benefits of HS2′, 3 June).
This is why MPs must support amendments to the energy bill today to decarbonise the power sector by 2030. It would give confidence to investors who want to create jobs by developing our huge clean energy potential, wean the nation of its reliance on increasingly expensive fossil fuels and put the UK at the forefront of the battle to tackle climate change.
More than 300 MPs from all parties – and the leadership of the Labour party – have pledged to vote for decarbonisation. But the votes of Liberal Democrats are likely to be critical. With their green credentials hanging in the balance, will Liberal Democrat MPs back a safe, clean energy future – or support George Osborne’s reckless dash for gas?
Andrew Pendleton
Head of campaigns, Friends of the Earth

Denis Campbell falls into a common trap in his laudatory report of the “virtual wards” initiative (‘Virtual wards’ urged as answer to strain on the NHS, 30 May): just because something reduces hospital bed days, overall savings to the NHS cannot be assumed. The Health Foundation reviewed the evidence about such schemes in 2011 and pointed out that, while daily costs tended to be lower for community care, the care tended to be required for longer, making savings difficult to achieve. While I would agree that innovative approaches to service provision may be a good thing, it is vital that the discussion takes account of good-quality existing evidence. Many service innovations sound a good idea and are appreciated by patients – technological telemedicine services and case management for the frail elderly being two good examples – but when properly evaluated show no overall cost savings. I hope the Guardian will be a little more critical in its approach.
Kath Checkland
Hope Valley, Derbyshire
• JD Manson calls for 30% more doctors to be trained and Derek Haselden rightly notes that existing GPs can’t treat patients at the same time that they are busy commissioning services (Letters, 27 May). The chair of the Royal College of General Practitioners acknowledges that there is a manpower crisis in general practice. Recently, around a third of all new GP trainees have had to be recruited from abroad – and many struggle to finish their training. So what is the latest plan for UK medical school admissions? Reduce them by 2%. You really couldn’t make it up.
Richard Wakeford
Cambridge

Recent stories of parliamentarians apparently agreeing to be paid by journalists posing as lobbyists raise difficult questions about our political system (Ministers race to change rules as lobbying scandals hit home, 3 June).
They follow a depressingly familiar pattern of people at the end of their political careers appearing to tout themselves as – to use the words of the former cabinet minister Stephen Byers – “cabs for hire”. But in framing their response, the government needs to remember that the only “lobbyists” involved in these scandals are fake ones. Genuine lobbyists would not and do not pay politicians – they are not allowed to under our code of conduct.
So when the deputy prime minister now decides that he needs urgently to introduce a register of lobbyists, he should remember that the stories of the past few days involve his current parliamentary colleagues, and not the colleagues he used to have when he worked as a lobbyist himself. If the government is serious about reform, it should not hide behind the smokescreen of blaming the public affairs industry. It should look also at the rules that govern parliamentarians. We do not oppose a statutory register of lobbyists, provided the government is equally serious about reforming the institutions that we seek to influence.
Francis Ingham
Public Relations Consultants Association
• Why should any parliamentarian expect to be paid to ask questions or chair interest groups? It should be a part of their core role covered by their salaries and allowances. I neither get nor expect a penny for the privilege of chairing the all-party group on diabetes in the Welsh assembly, and nor would any of my colleagues.
The greed disease that started in the City some 40 years ago exploded with Mrs Thatcher’s deregulation in 1986, and it still means that already well-remunerated captains of industry expect to get bonuses even for mediocre performance on the job. The City, the boardroom and the London-based parliamentary process still need fumigating and inoculating against these corrupt practices if we are to convince the public that we are serious about reconstructing our economy and delivering the jobs and homes people desperately need.
Jenny Rathbone AM
Lab, Cardiff Central
• The Guardian should not be supporting the idea of constituents having the right to recall – ie dismiss – their MP between elections, however many of them might vote to do so (Editorial, 1 June). Fear of deselection already makes too many MPs slaves of their constituents, especially their local parties. They tend to spend too much time as untrained and unqualified social workers, doing work that should be done by local councillors and social workers, at the expense of their real jobs at Westminster – holding the government to account and ensuring that the laws they pass are fit for purpose.
Not only must MPs try to avoid deselection by their local parties: their careers depend on the approval of the party whips, with their threats and bribes to compel them to vote according to their parties’ instructions, not their own best judgment and conscience.
We already see a House of Commons largely comprising automatons, lobby fodder with only rare signs of an independent spirit. Adding the power of recall at the whim of constituents would inevitably aggravate this dismal situation. We should remember Burke’s dictum that your MP owes you “not his industry only, but his judgment; and he betrays, instead of serving you, if he sacrifices it to your opinion.” The time to get rid of an unsatisfactory MP is when he or she stands for re-election, not at random times between elections whenever he incurs momentary unpopularity by some act of brave defiance.
Brian Barder
London
• Nick Clegg is optimistic the laws on lobbying can be changed before 2015, which is just a couple of years away. Yet strangely, earlier this year, his coalition colleagues at the Department for Work and Pensions managed to rush through retrospective legislation to deny jobseekers compensation in the wake of the court ruling on unpaid work linked to benefits. That was deemed necessary to “protect the national economy”. So, why not the same urgency of action to protect the national democracy?
Colin Montgomery
Edinburgh

The Sutton Trust argues that pupils living in more affluent areas do better than those in less affluent areas because they attend “top schools” (Leading state schools are now ‘more socially exclusive’, 3 June). By the same token, do relatively affluent people enjoy better health and longer lives because they are treated by “top GPs”? And no doubt the lower crime rates in the leafier suburbs are because they are watched over by “top police officers”?
David Hoult
Stockport
• Martin Allen (Letters, 31 May) quotes the Commons Treasury committee on the exorbitant cost of PFI projects without corresponding benefits. This results from the fundamental dishonesty of the system, which forced bodies bidding for PFI funding to “prove” that private finance would be cheaper than public, whether it was or not. In a scheme for three primary schools in York, the PFI cost was £11.1m,against an initial public sector comparator of £10.3m. To make a PFI case, an “estimated risk” figure of £1.4m was added to the public sector figure, and the bid succeeded. The details of actual risk (if any) transferred to the private provider remain confidential.
John Heawood
York
• Maybe both physicists and philosophers (Letters, June 1) are Otto Neurath’s “sailors who on the open sea must reconstruct their ship but are never able to start afresh from the bottom”. With ocean levels rising, this may soon be a case of all of us being at sea.
Bruce Ross-Smith
Oxford
• Perhaps with the increasing (individual) size of the population, and the reluctance of theatres to use more appropriate – ie larger – seats to pack more people in, we are just desperate to extrude ourselves from the the seats for an ovation (Letters, 3 June).
Jude Glendinning
Lancaster, Lancashire
• I’ve didn’t want to add to the journalistic cliches (Letters, 3 June) but resistance, as ever, is futile.
Mike Crabtree
London
• Ironies. Always delicious.
Mark Redhead
Oxford

Independent:

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In his moving article (3 May) Lord Alli refers to his struggle to persuade the bishops in the House of Lords not to present a united front against gay marriage.
Many of those who oppose the concept claim to be traditionalists, but even in the early days of the Church of England there were those who took an opposite view. Among them was the first King of Great Britain, James I (VI of Scotland), who has a good claim to be co-founder with Elizabeth I of the established church.
In 1624, writing to his favourite, George Villiers, whom he had recently created Duke of Buckingham, James told him how much he hoped “that we may make at this Christmas a new marriage, ever to be kept hereafter. For God so love me as I desire only to live in this world for your sake, and that I had rather live banished in any part of the earth with you than live a sorrowful widow’s life without you. And so God bless you, my sweet child and wife, and grant that ye may ever be a comfort to your dear dad and husband.”
James never attempted to conceal the depth of his love for Villiers. He informed his privy council that he loved Buckingham more than any other man and that they should not regard this as a defect, since “Jesus Christ had done the same as he was doing, and that there was nothing reprehensible about it, for Christ had his John and he had his George”.
James was a biblical scholar of distinction and a devout Anglican. He commissioned the translation of the scriptures which in England is referred to as the Authorised Version and in America as the King James Bible. As supreme governor of the Church of England James clearly saw no incompatibility between belief and gay marriage.
Roger Lockyer, London NW1
 
Should the House of Lords vote against giving a second reading to the Marriage (Same Sex Couples) Bill, any resulting “constitutional crisis,” as warned by Lord Alli, will be solely the responsibility of the Government for pushing ahead with a proposal for which there is no electoral mandate and which was the subject of a flawed consultation process that sought views only on how, not whether, such a fundamental change in the understanding of marriage should be enacted.
Most of the bishops have made clear their opposition to any redefinition of marriage to include same-sex couples. To be true to their conscience, all those who are members of the House of Lords should attend and vote against the Bill, regardless of the claimed constitutional consequences.
David Lamming, Boxford, Suffolk
 
Politicians and lobbyists – real and fake
Recent stories of parliamentarians apparently agreeing to be paid by journalists posing as lobbyists raise difficult questions about our political system.
They follow a depressingly familiar pattern of people at the end of their political careers appearing to tout themselves as “cabs for hire”. But in framing its response, the Government needs to remember that the only “lobbyists” involved in these scandals are fake ones. Genuine lobbyists do not pay politicians – they are not allowed to under our code of conduct.
So when the Deputy Prime Minister now decides that he needs urgently to introduce a register of lobbyists, he should remember that the stories of the past few days involve his current parliamentary colleagues, and not the colleagues he used to have when he worked as a lobbyist himself. If the Government is serious about “reform”, it should not hide behind the smokescreen of blaming the public affairs industry. It should look also at the rules that govern parliamentarians and all-party parliamentary groups.
We do not oppose a statutory register of lobbyists, provided the Government is equally serious about reforming the institutions that we seek to influence.
Francis Ingham, Director-General, The Public Relations Consultants Association, London SW1
    
The latest lobbying scandals again show that a free press is vital in order to expose corruption in Westminster, as you say (leading article, 3 June).
But it’s a shame that the public doesn’t know which, if any, politician targets are found to give a rebuff to undercover journalists trying to set up deals. Newspapers only publish the identities of those who take the bait – the “positive” results.
Interpretation of “negative” results is not straightforward: a rebuff may only reflect the incompetence of those making the approach, not the upstanding behaviour of the target. Nevertheless, it is important to acknowledge the publication bias here: the public only learn about “positive” results; yet there must be “negative” results, too.
Dr Alex May, Manchester
 
The revelations about peers and lobbying are worrying, but this was entrapment by the media.  It is comparable to the practice of American divorce lawyers who employ women to pursue possibly errant husbands to see if they can be “persuaded” to commit adultery. We all like to think that we will resist such temptation, until it happens to us.
What I would like to know is what the real lobbying companies are up to, not the fake ones.
Nigel Scott, London N22
 
Presumably contracts entered into in bad faith by false entities are illegal and unenforceable, so Mr Mercer and the peers involved are fully entitled to keep the money without providing any services whatsoever. They should be reinstated forthwith.
Frank Donald, Edinburgh
 
Constitutional crisis? Bring it on!
If unelected peers do block same-sex marriage and cause a constitutional crisis maybe it would not be a bad thing. Look at the state our parliamentary system is now in: unelected peers, and MPs, still getting caught selling influence; ministers rebuked for misusing statistics; politicians sucking up to newspapers, unions, big business and rich individuals. Can anyone deny that politics in this country is seriously broken?
 Maybe it is time for a constitutional crisis so we can begin to talk seriously about reform of parliament. Here’s a quick list of suggestions to get us started.
An end to the House of Lords being used as a dumping ground by the establishment. A proportionally elected upper chamber of review. State funding of political parties and a ban on all other forms of funding. MPs to be given a substantial pay rise but with an end to expenses and earnings from any other source. A ban on high-ranking civil servants working in the private sector in areas related to their public service work for five years after leaving their post.
Of course for any of this to happen, the people would have to take on the most powerful vested interest in this country – our elected politicians.
Adam Salt, Cheadle, Staffordshire
 
The present proposals for reform of the House of Lords (leading article, 3 June) are proposals to hand it over completely to the party machines. They envisage proportional representation or something approaching it, with “elected” members taken from party lists in numbers proportional to their party’s performance in the poll.
It would be better to stick with an appointments system, but going from the present situation of agreement between the Government and Opposition to an independent appointments committee which would appoint new members of the Upper House for a fixed, but relatively long, tenure.
Roger Schafir, London N21
 
It’s not Israel blocking talks
Michael W Cook (letter, 30 May) ignores the fact  that the Palestinian leadership has not only rejected the Israeli peace offers of 2000 and 2008, but has refused to come to the negotiating table for the past four years.
Prime Minister Netanyahu accepted the principle of the two-state solution, unprecedented for a Likud party leader, and froze all building in the West Bank for 10 months, and still the  Palestinian President, Mahmoud Abbas, refused to resume negotiations.
Netanyahu has repeatedly offered to resume the direct talks at any time but to no avail. Abbas continues to impose preconditions, asking Israel to accept positions which should be decided only at the negotiating table. 
Dr Jacob Amir, Jerusalem
 
English valued only overseas
I have lived and worked in several countries where English is not the mother tongue, but is taught, revered and practised. It would be a pity if the “guardians” of our linguistic heritage told the rest of the world that it no longer matters if it can’t spell correctly, wrongly punctuates and doesn’t pronounce English in the way it is rigorously taught overseas.
If Simon Horobin and others continue to dumb-down our language, future visitors may be unable to understand the semi-literate natives who greet them on arrival here.
Robert Bridges, Belmont, Blackburn
 
Sent home with a drain
As a surgeon in a NHS hospital, I would like to reassure Jennifer Phipps (letter, 1 June) that it is not uncommon to be discharged from hospital with a drain left in. Whilst within the medical literature there is debate about the value of such drains, they purportedly reduce the incidence of wound complications.
It would seem to be more of a national outrage to utilise public funds to keep an otherwise well patient in hospital, ensuring disrupted sleep, and an increased exposure to multi-resistant bacterial infections. The issue here is patient and public education.
Declan Dunne, Liverpool
 
Wrong, but not surprising
Sue Thomas (letter, 3 June) is right: rape is rape, there is no excuse on the part of men. Perhaps what perplexes some of us is the surprise on the part of women.
If a car were to be left with the doors open and the key in the ignition in some dubious area of one of our inner cities it would almost certainly be stolen, and that would be wrong. Theft is theft, no excuse – but surprise?
Vaughan Thomas, Usk, Gwent
 
Bad feeling
There was once an obscure English word for Schadenfreude (Philip Hensher, 1 June). “Epicaricacy” is basically Greek for “joy around the bad”. It never caught on, and my guess at the reason for this is that it simply wasn’t a respectable emotion. For centuries, people had to listen to 1 Cor. 13 v6 quite a lot.  If you go to church weddings, you’ll still hear it quite often.
Ruth Grimsley, Sheffield

Times:

‘If the Government is serious about reform, it should not hide behind the smokescreen of blaming the public affairs industry’
Sir, Stories of the dealings of parliamentarians and journalists posing as lobbyists raise difficult questions about our political system (“Peers face expulsion in move to end sleaze”, June 3). They follow a depressingly familiar pattern.
But in framing its response, the Government needs to remember that the only “lobbyists” involved in these scandals are fake ones. Genuine lobbyists would not and do not pay politicians — they are not allowed to under our code of conduct.
If the Government is serious about reform, it should not hide behind the smokescreen of blaming the public affairs industry. It should look also at the rules that govern parliamentarians and all-party parliamentary groups. We do not oppose a statutory register of lobbyists, provided the Government is equally serious about reforming the institutions we seek to influence.
Francis Ingham
Chief executive, Public Relations Consultants Association
Sir, I was the inaugural secretary of the Association of Professional Political Consultants, the body representing and regulating dedicated commercial lobbying consultants. We compiled, at the request of the Select Committee on Members’ Interests, a register listing staff and clients of each member firm. It was sent twice yearly to the committee and the Cabinet Office, but after no more than three editions the recipients asked us whether the register was really necessary because it was being filed away unread and was just taking up space.
Those who now advocate a register as a cure for the perceived iniquities of lobbying should have regard to recent history.
Charles Miller
Sandwich, Kent
Sir, The cash for lobbying scandal in both the Commons and the Lords is a triumph for a free press and underscores the post-Leveson perils associated with giving politicians any role in press regulation.
Having candidly described — in Opposition — the parliamentary lobbying system as “the next scandal waiting to happen”, David Cameron’s failure to press ahead with reforms once in office simply reinforces the cynicism towards politicians and the political system among an increasingly disillusioned electorate.
Political lobbying isn’t in itself intrinsically wrong in a parliamentary democracy, but an unreformed and opaque system most certainly is.
Paul Connew
Former editor, Sunday Mirror, St Albans, Herts
Sir, I could not agree less with the proposal in your leader “Payment in Parliament” (June 3) that MPs and working peers should be paid more. Is burglary caused by underpaid burglars? What we need is honest men and women in Parliament, and the more financial motivation is thought to matter, the less likely we are to find them.
Christopher Gadsden
Penryn, Cornwall
Sir, I would be intrigued to know how many of the 763 sitting members of the House of Lords were targeted by the “fake” lobbying firm but honourably turned down the opportunity to lobby on behalf of South Korean solar power or Fiji’s re-entry to the Commonwealth.
I believe it might add a reassuring dimension to the issue if we showed hidden recordings of ennobled members showing both judgment and probity in the face of financial inducements from the Pacific region.
James Callander
London W12

Will this bring about a ‘profound change in the basic unit of society’, or will things continue pretty much as they already are?
Sir, The six Lords in their letter supporting the Marriage (Same Sex Couples) Bill (June 3) state that “it would be wrong to hinder a measure whose time has come”.
This is mere historical determinism and is a specious argument which proves nothing. Both Communism and National Socialism and indeed many other “isms” have used the so-called “inevitable progress of history” to justify their ideas, only eventually to be shown to be wrong.
Same-sex “marriage” will bring about a profound change in the basic unit of society, which is the family; this change has fundamental implications in the short term and the long term for the welfare of us all and particularly for our children.
The present attempt to bulldoze this measure through Parliament without proper consideration of the consequences is foolhardy and dangerous.
John Owen
Sittingbourne, Kent
Sir, It has become a cliché to say that the acceptance of equal marriage “redefines marriage” (letter, June 3). It does not.
When the Church of England ordained women priests we did not “redefine” the priesthood or alter the sacrament of ordination. We admitted a different gender into it — and in doing so greatly enhanced the Church’s ministry and credibility. Yes, the priesthood looks different, in one sense — but only superficially. Its essence and meaning are unchanged.
In exactly the same way, allowing gay people to marry does not redefine marriage or alter the sacrament of matrimony, and it will certainly not usher in polygamy and incest, as some have bizarrely suggested. Marriage will continue to rest on exactly the same vows of lifelong fidelity and commitment between two people; and by reflecting Christ’s faithful love for us, same-sex marriage will be no less sacramental than heterosexual marriage — a channel of God’s grace and blessing to the couple, the Church and society in general.
The Very Rev Dr Jeffrey John
Dean of St Albans

There are times when arranging conferences abroad makes more sense, both financially and in terms of attracting interested parties
Sir, I sympathise with Malcolm Walker of Iceland (“Now they’re taxing fun, insists Iceland boss ordered to pay £2.5m Disney bill”, May 31).
In the past Mace, the voluntary group of retailers, of which I was company secretary, arranged overseas conferences for the shop-owners which were well attended. We tried arranging UK conferences — two days in Birmingham for example — but attendances were poor. Overseas we were able to put over the contents of films and group discussions of matters vital to their success as shop-owners.
Yes, there were local visits and entertainments. But the Inland Revenue (as it then was) appreciated the business purpose, and gave clearance for our costs and for the retailers’ conference fees.
D. M. Milstone
Northwood, Greater London

There may be a case for planes to adopt some of the safety features that have been considered standard on cars for years
Sir, Most cars have warning lights on the dashboard to indicate if a door is not safely shut — a simple and effective safety feature. Why are Airbus A319s not fitted with a similar device to indicate whether the latches holding in place the engine covers have been secured (report, June 1)?
David Slinger
Highnam, Glos

While we may nowadays have become unused to the term ‘authoress’, at least one of our most famous writers described herself thus
Sir, At least one far from inferior writer had no objection to the term “authoress” (Oliver Kamm, The Pedant, June 1).
Writing to the Rev James Stanier Clarke, the Prince Regent’s librarian at Carlton House, in December 1815, Jane Austen described herself as “with all possible Vanity, the most unlearned, & uninformed Female who ever dared to be an Authoress”.
Emma had just been published.
Christine Penney
Birmingham

Telegraph:
SIR – Simon Thurley (report, May 30) is right to question the £34.9 million recently spent on saving a Raphael for the nation while many of our historic houses and castles are “crumbling”.
Two thirds of Britain’s built heritage is cared for by private owners, and much of that is represented by the Historic Houses Association whose members spend £140 million a year just on maintenance – far less than the £390  million backlog of repairs that are urgently needed.
These buildings are open for the public to visit and for a raft of other events such as weddings, concerts and festivals. They are the reason most often quoted by tourists for choosing to visit our country and they act as magnets for economic activity in some of the harder-to-reach parts of the nation. But the cost of keeping them open is rising and Dr Thurley is correct to ask whether a limited heritage budget could be spent more effectively.
Richard Compton
President, Historic Houses Association
London SW1

SIR – The same old corrupt practices go round and round in Westminster in a never-ending cycle. Most of the perpetrators will slip through the net as usual and continue their dirty deeds.
Three cheers for a free press and long may it stay free. Any attempts to muzzle this independent watchdog by those responsible for corruption must be resisted by the electorate at all costs.
Mick Ferrie
Mawnan Smith, Cornwall
SIR – MPs such as Patrick Mercer need to remember, and to be held to account for the fact, that they are employed to represent their constituents and no one else. They should not stray into the territory of personal gain. Clearly some are wholly unqualified for this demanding role.
V G Grey
Chadbury, Worcestershire
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03 Jun 2013
SIR – As a retired accountant I try to make myself useful by aiding worthwhile institutions – the parish council, whose accounts I audit, and the Church, of which I am parochial treasurer.
It is discouraging that some of those in senior positions in politics and the Church behave in a corrupt and arrogant manner, the former lining their pockets with taxpayers’ money and the latter denigrating traditional Christian institutions by supporting same-sex marriage.
Andrew D Hodgkinson
Market Lavington, Wiltshire
SIR – It is not quite correct to say an MP cannot be expelled from Parliament unless he is serving a long prison sentence (report, June 1).
In 1948, the Labour MP Gary Allighan was thrown out of the House even though he had done nothing criminal.
Allighan, a journalist, had written a magazine article claiming that some fellow MPs were accepting cash from journalists for confidential leaks. An inquiry found that one MP was regularly writing well-paid articles using parliamentary information for a newspaper under an alias. That turned out to be Allighan.
In a long and furious debate, he was criticised from all sides for this hypocrisy. The Leader of the House of Commons, Herbert Morrison, proposed a six-month suspension but it was successfully argued this would deprive his constituents of representation for too long, while, on the other hand, if he were expelled there would be a by-election in which he would be entitled to stand.
He did not, and emigrated to South Africa.
Rodney Bennett
Richmond, Surrey
SIR – The present Government would like to appoint former Army officers directly into the senior ranks of the police service.
I take it that Patrick Mercer would be its idea of the perfect candidate.
Andrew Vaughan
Ventnor, Isle of Wight
Tax avoidance
SIR – The most effective means of encouraging foreign multinationals to pay their fair share of UK taxes is through public, rather than legal censure.
There is little evidence to support Matthew Sinclair’s assertion (Comment, May 28) that levels of complication equate to levels of avoidance. Complication merely incentivises multinationals to seek the advice of the “big four” tax partners on how to navigate around those complications. Simplicity penalises the many for the avoidance of the few and would make the UK a less attractive location for overseas investment.
By the same token, sales taxes have proved ineffective globally, merely relocating corporate centres of activity and diminishing incentives to enter to the markets which impose them.
Only consumer-spending (or clicking) decisions will provoke long-term changes in the attitudes of the executives who are responsible for profits and dividends. Any changes in rules are always avoidable and a stop-gap measure.
Gareth Pryce
Hayling Island, Hampshire
SIR – One way to reduce the opaque cross-border pricing and multi-jurisdictional tricks that large international corporations play to avoid taxes is to embody within law a general-purpose “catch all” clause.
Within an Act of Parliament, such a clause might state that one purpose of the Act is to ensure that any company or organisation supplying goods or services to the UK pays the same amount of company or sales taxes on its UK sales as if they were a company or organisation registered for tax in the UK. The UK courts could then determine whether there had been an infringement of the Act and require restitution.
Jonathan Sayeed
London SW1
Arming Syrians
SIR – The controversy over arming Syrian rebels (Letters, May 30) reminds me of a comment made by Douglas Hurd during the collapse of Yugoslavia: “You do not put out a fire by pouring petrol on it.”
Those words preceded the heavily armed Serbian army’s slaughter of thousands of poorly armed Croatian independence fighters, and the slaughter did not stop after victory. Mass graves of non-combatants have since been found.
If the United Nations had any influence, the situation in Syria would be its responsibility. But the behaviour of the Dutch UN troops in Croatia is indicative of its interest. It is highly unlikely that it will take any action. Do we stand by, fearful of Russia, and allow Assad to continue his slaughter? The answer should be obvious.
Ron Mole
Alcester, Warwickshire
Tunnel vision
SIR – Paul Scorser writes about ascending the Zugspitze in Germany (Letters, May 30). When at the summit, one can walk along a tunnel until you come to an iron door. Open the door and you find yourself in Austria. I wonder how many countries share such an unusual entrance?
Adrian Holloway
Minchinhampton, Gloucestershire
SIR – Sixty years ago I was in Darjeeling with my father, and we went to Tenzing Norgay’s home to meet him, and view the equipment he used on the Everest expedition. I asked him about the Yeti, and he was quite sure there was something large out there as one of the sherpas had seen a huge footprint.
Gloria Parker
Reigate, Surrey
Over-complicated laws
SIR – As Sue Cameron implies (Comment, May 23), we have too much legislation and too much of it is impenetrable. A recent House of Lords report said that between 1970 and 2009 there were 1,827 Acts passed and 54,349 Statutory Instruments adopted. These amount to 401,539 pages of print. It is ludicrous to assert that anyone can keep up with this torrent.
Before the invention of printing, “ignorance of the law” was a good defence in common law. It was unreasonable to be convicted of an administrative offence like eating meat, not fish, on Fridays – if you weren’t there for the proclamation of the law you wouldn’t know about it, except by word of mouth. Henry VII and Henry VIII were concerned to get rid of this defence and saw the invention of printing as the way forward.
I yearn for a government that will promise to pass virtually no new legislation for 10 years and apply itself to repealing hundreds of Acts and binning thousands of Statutory Instruments and a judiciary that will recognise the common-law defence of “ignorance” once again when reasonable. This would be unpopular with lawyers and administrators, but it is the only way I can see to get them to simplify legislation.
Tim Guinness
London SW1
Thatcher endowment
SIR – Oxford University should certainly honour Margaret Thatcher (report, May 30) but founding yet another college is not the best way to do it. The Cambridge model of fewer, bigger colleges is more sensible than Oxford’s plethora of smaller institutions.
Instead, a fund should be created to endow and name existing posts at the former women’s colleges: Thatcher Fellows in Chemistry, Law, Politics, and Economics would help to reduce the endowment gap between the former women’s and former men’s colleges. They would also keep
her memory green in the particular part of the university of which she was so distinguished a product.
Nicholas Shrimpton
Oxford
Political gamble
SIR – A horse named Libertarian, trained by Burke, was surely a natural choice for the Derby. What a shame he could only manage to come second to the appropriately named Ruler of the World – but at least I made a small profit.
Michael Brotherton
Chippenham, Wiltshire
Remembering Coronation Day, 60 years later
SIR – I spent Coronation Day in the Royal Ballroom in Tottenham rehearsing for the evening’s television programme which was “Dance – from Elizabeth I to Elizabeth II”.
We, the Bruce Smith formation team, were, together with three other teams, representing the 1950s.
The programme was live and overran by a mile. We were not on until the early hours of the morning so very few people stayed up to watch us.
My father said that, at one stage, my partner and I filled the screen.
Joy Riley
Radley, Oxfordshire
SIR – Four of us, all students from the Royal Academy of Music, took up our stand on the edge of the pavement in The Mall at 5pm. Taking it in turns to guard our patch, we remained there all night with cushions, blankets and food. There were thousands of people all around and the police made everyone stand up at 1.30am, just to make sure we could, I guess. It rained on and off during the night but we had a grandstand view of the procession, which started at 8.30am. We stayed until its return at 3.45pm. A never-to-be-forgotten day.
Sheila Tracy
Kingswood, Surrey
SIR – I was six years old at the time, having a wonderful holiday at Butlins Pwchelli and looking forward to watching the Coronation in the Butlins theatre.
On the morning of the big day I woke up itching to find I had chicken pox, so we had to come home after only one week.
I spent the whole day on a train from Pwchelli to Cardiff itching like crazy so I missed the Coronation.
Leslie Watson
Derwen-fawr, Carmarthenshire

Irish Times:

   
Sir, – Most people applaud when the business case for change coincides with human rights. It’s good to do the right thing and even better when both individuals and the taxpayer benefits. Or at least one would have thought so until reading the distressing news that a mother was left with no option after cumulative cutbacks – including cutbacks to transport — to place her disabled daughter in residential care.
The cost of such care is generally a multiple of the cost of supporting people to lead independent lives and be integrated in their communities. No one, it seems, is doing the sums. The result is that one arm (or multiple arms) of the State takes away and higher costs ensue. This is utterly irrational – a symptom of a system that lacks both critical intelligence as well as moral sensibility.
Few could have failed to notice the irony that Ireland is poised to ratify the UN convention on the rights of persons with disabilities. One of its core rights is the right to live independently and be included in the life of the community.
Among other things, this requires a conscious shifting of resources away from institutions and toward supports to enable people live meaningful and productive lives in the community.
Many of us have advocated strongly and publicly against corruption that seemingly allows institutions to flourish in Eastern Europe (and sometimes, to add insult to injury, with EU taxpayers’ money). No one is suggesting that corruption lies behind this recent awful news. But we certainly cannot assume the high ground to criticise others when we are complacent about our own seemingly dysfunctional system that produces the same result.
Many advocates have been arguing about the need to enshrine the right to community living in Irish law. I believe the time is right to do so. It is especially in times of austerity that we should spending our money smartly and efficiently. Pouring money into institutions serves no one’s interests – least of all the taxpayer’s. Law on its own is never enough. The reflex in the administrative system tends toward dysfunction.
This Government came into power on a promise of reforming how things were done in the public sector. The need for this change was brought sharply into focus with the above news. This can be done. The lethargy of the past should not keep us from transforming the future.
In British Columbia, for example, policy makers have to spend a “professional empathy” period living with the people whose lives will be affected by their policy choices. How many of our senior civil servants have done that? In Belgium, the social security system is moving toward a posture of “co-ownership” of policy with the people affected. Far from amounting to an intrusion on the policy prerogatives of those in power, this ensures the wise use of power. Spending money in institutions is simply crazy from a taxpayer’s point of view.
I hope and trust every right-thinking person in the country was disgusted at the above news and that this is a wake-up call to the Government. We need to get serious about how taxpayers’ money is spent and to honour the rights of those who elected them into office. – Yours, etc,
Prof GERARD QUINN,
Centre for Disability Law &

Sir, – Joe Murray (May 28th) states that JFK’s famous “Ask not what your country can do for you, but what you can do for your country” might reflect the ethos of the new Haddington Road “agreement” for the Public Service in this country. I remain to be convinced.
Apart from the veracity of Samuel Johnson’s adage about patriotism, it’s worth bearing in mind that “the troika’s position reflects the view that the achievement of the €300 million target would send an important signal to bond investors as the Government plots its return to the private debt markets later this year” (Home News, May 23rd).
I don’t see much about the greater public good there. More a case of, as has been the motivating factor all along, the fulfilment of industrial levels of private greed. – Yours, etc,
JD MANGAN,
Stillorgan Road,

A chara, – Arthur Beesley (Business, May 23rd) wrote that Ireland’s rate of corporation tax was reduced from 38 per cent to 12.5 per cent in 2003. This is incorrect.
Prior to 2003, the rate of corporation tax on profits from manufacturing and international (ie export) services – which covers most activity of foreign firms operating in Ireland – was just 10 per cent. The 38 per cent rate applied to all other corporate activity, and related to non-manufacturing activity within the Irish economy (mainly conducted by Irish businesses).
Following a finding by the EU that this distinction was discriminatory, a standard corporation tax rate of 12.5 per cent, applicable to all corporate activity in Ireland, was introduced in 2003. Thus, what was, in effect, the tax rate applying to foreign companies was increased in order to compensate the government for the tax lost through the reduction of the tax rate on domestic non-manufacturing activity.
As it happens, the “headline” rate of 12.5 per cent is of little relevance as far as the foreign corporate sector is concerned, as the average rate of tax paid by this sector is nowhere near this level. – Is mise,
Dr PROINNSIAS

Sir, – As the country faces a crisis in animal food supply, I would like to draw attention to an ancient type of food used in the past to feed livestock. The humble furze bush or whin was collected and ground down to shreds. This was done by use of a hand-wound machine known as a mangle grinder. There was, to my knowledge, also a similar machine with a finer mechanism. The theory was that the product was very suitable for horses.
It grows and prospers on any type of soil, bog or ditch and will weather any climate that comes our way.
Think of our cutaway bogs lying dormant and being eyed by speculators. This much-maligned bush could carpet the areas which are, at present, non-productive and, being an early bloomer, would be a saviour for our bee population, helping it to return to strength.
Sometimes they are blind who do not wish to see. – Yours, etc,
DERMOT CARBER

A chara, – Arthur Beesley (Business, May 23rd) wrote that Ireland’s rate of corporation tax was reduced from 38 per cent to 12.5 per cent in 2003. This is incorrect.
Prior to 2003, the rate of corporation tax on profits from manufacturing and international (ie export) services – which covers most activity of foreign firms operating in Ireland – was just 10 per cent. The 38 per cent rate applied to all other corporate activity, and related to non-manufacturing activity within the Irish economy (mainly conducted by Irish businesses).
Following a finding by the EU that this distinction was discriminatory, a standard corporation tax rate of 12.5 per cent, applicable to all corporate activity in Ireland, was introduced in 2003. Thus, what was, in effect, the tax rate applying to foreign companies was increased in order to compensate the government for the tax lost through the reduction of the tax rate on domestic non-manufacturing activity.
As it happens, the “headline” rate of 12.5 per cent is of little relevance as far as the foreign corporate sector is concerned, as the average rate of tax paid by this sector is nowhere near this level. – Is mise,
Dr PROINNSIAS

Sir, – Graduating this week from Graduate Entry to Medicine (GEM) at University College Cork leads me to question the fate of the programme. The previous government created these courses to enable graduates in any discipline to enter medical school with the cost divided equally between the State and the student. Tailored credit packages were created to cover students’ fees and expenses. The overarching aim was to retain graduates and enrich the pool of prospective doctors. I am one of the produce.
Several reports, including the 2006 Medical Education In Ireland: A New Direction concluded that the GEM programmes would improve access for mature individuals and those less advantaged to the ultimate benefit of patients and the wider community.
The recent downturn in the economy has seen the State contribution decline significantly and the availability of credit vanish. What was envisaged as a strategy to modernise Irish medical education has reverted to one affording access only to those with means.
The Government and the university sector must remain conscious of their societal responsibility to provide access to medicine to a wide variety of applicants.
I was lucky to be in the right place at the right time; Ireland, 2009. Ireland 2013 would not be as kind. – Yours, etc,
Dr FRED A ENGLISH,

Irish Independent:

* The South Tipperary Coroner recently highlighted the undeniable link between a sharp increase in suicide in Ireland and the financial pressures many people are under due to debts they owe to financial institutions.
Also in this section
Media furthers homegrown myth
‘Cowardly’ label unfair
Adios, Matthew
* The South Tipperary Coroner recently highlighted the undeniable link between a sharp increase in suicide in Ireland and the financial pressures many people are under due to debts they owe to financial institutions.
The coroner was critical of the harassment meted out to people who find themselves in this unfortunate situation.
During the economic downturn, there has been considerable evidence that many Irish people have become suicidal because they have found themselves in severe debt either to a financial institution or perhaps to the State itself. Sadly, many have gone on to take their own lives because they were unable to cope with the pressure.
The coroner and others have pleaded with the State and with financial institutions to bring in measures to ease the burden on those in severe debt. However, I have never heard anybody put forward the argument that if someone is suicidal because of a financial debt, then that debt should somehow be eliminated in order to save the person’s life.
The legislation now being presented by the Government proposes that when there is a risk to a pregnant woman’s life because she is suicidal, action should be taken to remove that which led to her becoming suicidal.
The action to be taken will result not in the elimination of a sum of money but rather another innocent human life. Will this legislation create a legal precedent allowing a case to be made for removing whatever leads someone to be suicidal?
Martin Delaney, PP
Rathdowney, Co Laois
CHILDCARE SILVER LINING
* I read with interest the article by David Coleman on June 1 in relation to the cost of childcare. As a married man with no children, I agree with his conclusion that the tax system is anti-family.
However, he failed to point out a positive unintended consequence. In a time of high unemployment, a lot of families would elect to have one parent stay at home to mind their children. Which would free up a lot of employment opportunities for those on the dole to fill. So not only would a lot of children be given better care at home but it would also have a big impact on the long-term unemployment numbers.
I imagine it costs more to have people on the dole than it does to end tax individualisation. A big win for families, society and the economy.
Caimin Murphy
Address with editor
FORGOTTEN GENERATION
* As a young graduate I was shocked by an article in ‘Weekend Review’ called “the Jilted Generation”. I felt it should more aptly have been called “the Forgotten Generation”. It did not touch on the issues affecting my friends here in Ireland who can’t afford to travel abroad for work.
This group merely goes unnoticed, experiencing social isolation and a lack of attachment to any sense of community. We are extremely vulnerable individuals with feelings of despair and lack of choice due to the Government glossing over the problem with schemes like Job Bridge.
Whether you are a qualified graduate or an early school leaver, there are few options for those who cannot afford to emigrate and this must change. In fact, whether “jilted” or “forgotten”, the scars for my generation will be irreparable.
W Flanagan Tobin
Dublin 3
MARTIN STILL DITHERING
* Micheal Martin’s decision to allow a free vote on the abortion issue proves a number of things.
He is still the same ditherer who ran the Department of Health by seeking yet another report on every single issue. His Fianna Fail genes render him incapable of making any decision that would be unpopular anywhere in the country.
The abortion issue is simply not important enough to risk splitting the party, unlike, for instance, the “National Question” so beloved of Fianna Fail.
Anthony O’Leary
Portmarnock, Co Dublin
COUNCIL MADNESS
* In reference to the council boundary changes and the number of councillors allocated on a ratio of one councillor per almost 5,000 people – permit me to say I am confused and disgusted with these figures.
The numbers are bloated beyond explanation. The numbers read as follows: 949 councillors will be elected in 137 electoral areas for 31 local authorities. Space does not permit me to point out how the nation could be run effectively by having 26 electoral areas for three local authorities with a maximum of 60 councillors.
Study the state of California, with 34 million people; it has the equivalent of one local authority, 54 electoral areas, with an equivalent ratio of one “councillor” to almost 500,000 people. California is run efficiently with these numbers.
Vincent J Lavery
Dalkey, Co Dublin
NO SKY AT THE AIRPORT
* While travelling through Dublin Airport recently, I noticed that all the TVs on display were tuned to Sky News. As the Dublin Airport Authority is a state-run public body and thus funded by the Irish taxpayer, I believe they should be seen to be supporting a fellow state body, ie RTE, which broadcasts its own dedicated news channel.
As we all know, first impressions are very important, and as the airport contributes greatly to first impressions of this country, it is disappointing that they are immediately subjected to a foreign news channel, or more appropriately, a Rupert Murdoch-owned news channel.
Patrick Slavin
Lucan, Co Dublin
TEACHING STANDARDS
* While teachers around the country ponder their next move in the pay and conditions dispute, spare a thought for the thousands of young people who will leave school this summer with nothing to show for it.
I wonder are there statistics on poor results from schools? Results that require a cohort of students to repeat year after year. Schools that rarely achieve big numbers for third-level entry. If so, are questions ever asked of those schools or teachers?
I myself went back to school as an adult and saw first hand teachers who could teach and motivate and teachers who could not.
Harry Mulhern
Millbrook Road, Dublin
CLIMATE CHANGE WORRY
* I was pleased to see the article in the Irish Independent recently explaining the unprecedented cold weather in plain language.
Frequently, media outlets are in denial about the reality of the climate change that is already seriously impacting on our economy, both in terms of the very poor yields for farmers as well as the increased damage to householders caused by floods.
We need to wake up to the fact that climate change is happening and that we face increasingly extreme and unpredictable weather in the future.
John Sharry
Clontarf, Dublin
CRYING OVER SPILLED MILK
* I agree with Jack Downey when he says that he “wants to assure the Government that the amount of property tax he would like to pay is €0″ (Letters, May 28).
While I empathise with him, I’m afraid he is years too late. The time for all of us to have made our feelings known was during the Celtic Tiger period when a small number of powerful citizens made decisions that bankrupted the country.
A Leavy
Sutton, Dublin 13
Irish Independent


Sweeping

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5 June 2013 Sweeping

Off around the park oh dear oh dear The sealord whas an idea to bring out the ‘hidden talents’ in the Navy. So a competition is arranged. Everyone does their pary pieces. And Leslie Phillips wins he has a Paul Robson voice, but only when he has a cold Priceless.
Another quiet day sweep the leaves chop down a small tree sort the rose move the table in the conservatory
We watch The Pallaisers They are married, that was quick and off to Switzerland for the honeymoon, she does not like it.
Mary wins at scrabble but get under 400 perhaps I can have my revenge tomorrow.

Obituary:

Sir Patrick Nairne
Sir Patrick Nairne, who has died aged 91, won an MC with the Seaforth Highlanders; was an effective permanent secretary at the DHSS; served on the Franks Committee probing responsibility for Argentina’s invasion of the Falklands; and was for seven years Master of St Catherine’s College, Oxford.

Sir Patrick Nairne, from a portrait by Andrew Festing for Essex University Photo: ANDREW FESTING/ESSEX UNIVERSITY
6:31PM BST 04 Jun 2013
The appointment of Nairne to run the DHSS in 1975, after he had served 25 years in the Admiralty and the MoD, surprised many. But Harold Wilson chose him because of his experience of working in an unwieldy organisation bristling with special interest groups which needed careful handling. Nairne was the ideal counterweight to the Social Services Secretary, Barbara Castle, who had contrived to upset much of the medical profession in record time.
By the time he retired, in 1981, Nairne was facing a wave of unrest in the NHS over the policies of Margaret Thatcher’s government and their consequences for public sector jobs. But he was equipped for this, too: in 1948 he had helped work up “Operation Zebra” to put sailors into the London docks during an unofficial strike. And as head of the Cabinet Office’s Civil Contingencies Unit in 1973-74, he had kept essential services going during the fuel crisis and the three-day week.
Patrick Dalmahoy Nairne was born on August 15 1921, the son of Lt-Col CS Nairne. From Radley he won an exhibition to University College, Oxford, but interrupted his studies in 1941 to join the Seaforths, attaining the rank of captain.
The Seaforths fought their way across North Africa, and in 1943 took part in the invasion of Sicily. Nairne served as intelligence officer with the 5th Battalion, and had the dangerous habit of climbing trees to get a better view of the battle. In August he was awarded an MC after he had reconnoitred forward under heavy enemy fire to produce swift and reliable reports. A few months later the regiment landed at Anzio.
Returning to Oxford on demobilisation, Nairne took a First in Modern History, and in 1947 joined the Admiralty. He first came to public notice in 1958 as private secretary to the First Sea Lord, Lord Carrington. Arriving at Portsmouth dockyard, Nairne, dressed in yachting-style Admiralty “uniform”, went up the gangway of the minesweeper Sheraton — ahead of Carrington — and was mistakenly piped aboard.
In 1965 he became private secretary to the Defence Secretary, Denis Healey. Two years later he was appointed assistant secretary for logistics, and in 1970 deputy under-secretary. He moved to the Cabinet Office in 1973 as second permanent secretary, taking charge of the Civil Contingencies Unit. But instead of returning to the MoD after two years, he went to the DHSS, where he robustly defended its continuance as a single department rather than two.
In the fervid atmosphere of the times, Nairne became concerned at the impact on civil servants’ morale of attacks by the media. In 1977 he wrote to Douglas Allen, head of the Home Civil Service, suggesting steps to secure “true understanding” of their work.
Nairne’s fellow mandarins liked the idea, feeling that civil servants were being blamed for decisions taken by ministers. Allen set up a “working group on publicity” to ease the criticism — especially of the Inland Revenue, Customs & Excise and the Driver and Vehicle Licensing Centre at Swansea — but the initiative ran into the ground.
The Thatcher government set Nairne new challenges. His secretary of state, Patrick Jenkin, instructed him to cut social security jobs and health quangos, but as the economy stalled they strove to limit the impact of recession on the welfare state.
Nairne appointed Mary Warnock to chair the ground-breaking committee of inquiry into human fertilisation and embryology. This led in 1991 to his chairing the Nuffield Council on Bioethics, considering questions raised by the genome programme.
In 1981 Nairne left Whitehall to become Master of St Catherine’s; he also became an honorary Fellow of University College, Oxford. He launched the 25th anniversary appeal at St Catherine’s, and supported Edward Heath’s unsuccessful campaign to be Chancellor of the university. He stood down in 1988 as some dons at St Catherine’s were mobilising to offer Mrs Thatcher a fellowship — a move from which he distanced the college.
His success at Oxford led Essex University to appoint Nairne its Chancellor, from 1983 to 1997. His first action was to bestow an honorary degree on Carrington, who had recently resigned over the Falklands.
Barely were those hostilities over than Nairne was appointed to Lord Franks’s committee, charged with ascertaining whether the invasion should have been anticipated. Many expected the government to be blamed, but the committee exonerated ministers and the Foreign Office of having failed to heed warning signals.
In 1984 Nairne called for a five-year bar on civil servants taking jobs with companies with which they had dealt during their careers. He told the Civil Service Select Committee: “I did not think it would be right for me to take a job in the pharmaceutical industry or the medical equipment industry, and certainly not in the tobacco industries, simply because I had had a good deal to do with that part of the private sector.”
In the same year he was appointed, with a local judge, to monitor reaction in Hong Kong to Sir Geoffrey Howe’s agreement to hand the colony over to China in 1997. They found overall acceptance, qualified by “concern and anxiety” about what the communists would do.
Nairne chaired the Institute of Medical Ethics’ working party on the implications of Aids for the NHS in 1987, and in 1996 a Commission on the Conduct of Referendums. From 1990 to 1992 he chaired the west regional board of Central Television.
With his wife, he was active in Church politics, and from 1993 to 1998 served as a Church Commissioner. Nairne was also, at various times, president of the Association of Civil Service Art Clubs, the Oxfordshire Craft Guild, Modern Art Oxford, the Radleian Society and the Seamen’s Hospital Society; vice-president of the Oxford Art Society; and chairman of the Irene Wellington Educational Trust and the Society For Italic Handwriting.
He was a trustee of the National Maritime Museum, the Joseph Rowntree Foundation, the National Aids Trust and Oxford School of Drama .
He was appointed CB in 1971, KCB in 1975 and GCB in 1981. He was sworn of the Privy Council in 1982.
Patrick Nairne married, in 1948, Penelope Chauncy Bridges, who survives him with their three sons and three daughters. One of their sons, Sandy Nairne, is Director of the National Portrait Gallery.
Sir Patrick Nairne, born August 15 1921, died June 4 2013

Guardian:

Larry Elliott’s apocalyptic reconstruction of what would have happened if Britain had joined the euro (3 June) is so fanciful and prejudicial that it merits a response. All his assumptions are questionable. It is quite possible that Britain could have negotiated an acceptably low entry rate for sterling as the price for UK membership, which most other member states wanted. As a eurozone member, Britain could have had a strong influence on monetary and fiscal policy, both in the eurozone ministerial group and at the ECB. As it was, Gordon Brown, to his frustration, was excluded from the former and the governor of the Bank of England was not a member of the inner ECB governing council.
Although interest rates and monetary policy would have been determined by the ECB, it is false to assume that it would have been exactly the same in the lead up to 2007, or that our domestic fiscal policy would not have taken a different and offsetting course. It is also absurd to claim that, deprived of the alleged safety net of devaluation, Britain would have landed in the same boat as Spain, Greece, Ireland and Portugal after the 2007-08 crash. Mr Elliott omits to point out that our precious safety valve of an unparallelled trade-weighted depreciation of well over 20% in sterling seems to have done little for our exports, manufacturing sector or economy more generally. This is not to claim that all would have been roses if we had joined the euro. But there is at least a sporting chance that, with our participation, the eurozone would have been better equipped to face the 2007-08 crisis, and Mr Elliott does no service to the current European debate by presenting such a one-sided analysis.
Brian Unwin
Dorking, Surrey

Kira Cochrane (How to win your fights, suffragette style, 30 May) offers a spirited analysis of suffragette tactics that might be useful for feminists today. But she cites only women-friendly sources and ignores the male-dominated history profession that has marginalised the suffragette movement and presented it in sexist and demeaning ways. George Dangerfield, in his influential The Strange Death of Liberal England (1935), called the courageous Emily Wilding Davison “a very unbalanced girl”, a description that has echoes down to the present. Andrew Rosen in Rise Up Women (1974) even suggested Emily may have found “a quasi-sexual fulfilment in the contemplation of self-destruction”; while David Mitchell in his biography of Christabel Pankhurst (1977) sneered that Emily’s funeral was like “a mobster’s farewell”. It is this kind of sexism that feminist historians have to fight today, not only in the books that are written by many male historians, but also in their workplaces.
June Purvis
University of Portsmouth

I am disappointed at the government’s revised national planning rules, which could lead to a dramatic increase in betting shops and moneylenders on high streets across the country (High streets shrink in 10 out of 12 towns on Portas scheme, 30 May). In Hackney we have campaigned for a change in the law to allow us to control the number of betting shops in an area if residents object, or if there are already too many. Three times the local authority average of bookmakers already exists in our borough, and we are deeply concerned of the impact yet more will have on the most vulnerable members of society and on the wider community.
Contrary to the aims of the report, we believe it will damage the regrowth of our high streets. We will apply for stronger powers through the Sustainable Communities Act, which allows councils and communities to put forward new thinking on how best to improve their local areas.
Jules Pipe
Mayor of Hackney
• Worthy as many of the projects inspired by the Portas scheme are, these fail to address the fundamental challenges faced by town centres. In Bedford the local team has worked to raise the profile of the high street and provided support for businesses. But this work does not tackle the planning framework, lack of versatile retail space, high rents, or the ease of access to competitor shopping centres – let alone internet shopping. This has produced a reduced catchment area. What is needed is not only positive promotion, but more people living in town centres. Allied to this should be real powers for local government to bring about change. Unfortunately, this goes against the centralisation of the national government, where even schools have been taken over. Equally there can be no real improvement unless local residents have a disposable income to spend. This means an improvement in the national economy – which is unlikely under the current chancellor.
Ian Nicholls
Bedford

Farmers are hopeful that a badger cull will save their animals (Humaneness of badger cull to be judged on noise of dying animals, 30 May) and the slaughter of cattle is a terrible waste, but the badger cull is an equally terrible, and cruel, waste. Farmers admit that the badgers have been infected by cattle. Equally importantly, some are saddened because healthy badgers are going to be destroyed as well as infected ones. But there will be no end to the illnesses and slaughter of dairy cows, and through them the infection of beef cattle, because dairy cows are now worked to exhaustion.
They are made to produce milk like machines so that after a few years they have dragging udders, lame feet and bodies like bags of bones. Dairy cows will continue to be vulnerable to disease after disease until the National Farmers’ Union and the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs stop trying to push the productivity of cows to cruel and unreasonable limits. The slaughter of badgers will not deal with the basic problem, which is in dairy farming itself.
Dr Jacqueline Sarsby
Uley, Gloucestershire
• Why do humans demand milk from cows? Two million of these poor milk machines are artificially inseminated yearly, their calves taken from them soon after birth so the dairy cows can spurt out a liquid humans wish to steal. These poor cows get a host of diseases because they are being pushed to their physiological limit.
Sara Starkey
Tonbridge, Kent
• If it is indeed the case that badger culls will involve untested killing methods, it is a very serious issue. As someone familiar with guns of all types and calibres for around 50 years, I do hope A&E departments in Somerset and Gloucestershire are up to the mark.
Not just badgers will be roaming in the night. If they are shot with small-bore firearms, it is unlikely they will be killed outright as they are extremely robust creatures. If larger calibre firearms are used, it may well be that serious wounds and deaths will not just be a feature of the badger population. Larger calibre firearms have an inherent risk of ricochet and in straight flight may go for miles. At night who can see what is where? Houses, children, nocturnal couples? What is being done defies any logic.
Andrew Gamble
Sheffield
• Some figures from Defra: 5,094 badgers are to be shot in west Gloucestershire and west Somerset; if this is “successful”, another 95,000 are to be killed in 40 other areas over four years; 28,000 cattle with TB were destroyed in England last year; the culls are expected to reduce the incidence of TB by 16%. If 16% of all TB in the country is eliminated that would be 3,800 cows. That is 26 dead badgers for each animal saved from TB. Is that a worthwhile result?
Harvey Cole
Winchester, Hampshire
• Canada controls the spread of rabies in their vast populations of skunks, raccoons and foxes by dropping vaccine baits both by hand and by air. If the Canadians can manage such a huge area by this method, it does make our shooting of badgers, whether they have TB or not, look rather primitive.
Lizzie Hill
Guildford, Surrey
The is the third time in 20 years the Met police have tried to promote positive discrimination (Report, 3 June). Each time they have been wrong. The real problem – and for other police services – is their ability to retain ethnic minority officers. It is the culture of policing, which makes generalised assumptions about some sections of society, that needs to change, not the colour of skin of the officers. And what about the need for 50% female officers, given the number of rapes and murders of women each month and year? All officers, at all ranks need to understand what equality looks like put it into practice with colleagues and more to the point, with the public.
Linda Bellos
Chair, Institute of Equality and Diversity Practitioners
• The standing ovation became de rigueur (Letters, 4 June) at the same time as “awesome” (pronounced “ahhsum”) became the standard American term of approbation; both seem to have crossed the pond (as we now call the Atlantic), leaving some of us sitting in our seats, unable to see anyone or thing on stage at curtain call, victims of our own stubborn unwillingness to join the herd.
Susan Loppert
London
•  So the progressive, cliche-free Guardian comes to Cork to investigate the multibillion-dollar Apple tax affair and still manages to work in a reference to an Irish Traveller child on a horse (Report, 30 May). What, were all the pubs shut?
Joseph Wood
Cork, Ireland
• You say that the Queen, in a new portrait, is accompanied by corgis and dorgis “snapping at her feet” (Report, 31 May). The cliche is especially amusing as the portrait directly contradicts this description. The three dogs facing the viewer have their jaws firmly closed and the one looking away from us hardly seems to be “snapping” at anything.
Steve Moss
Sutton Coldfield
• Three mentions of oral sex before breakfast on Monday (Oral sex caused throat cancer that nearly killed me, says Douglas, 3 June; Interview, G2, 3 June; The weekend’s TV, G2, 3 June)? Is this part of the five-a-day diet?
Margaret Dowdeswell
Riding Mill, Northumberland

What is Ed Miliband thinking? Yesterday his shadow chancellor, Ed Balls, said a future Labour government would means-test winter fuel payments (Report, 3 June 2013). Obviously this is the thin end of the wedge. When the Tories extend means-testing to healthcare, which they would clearly like to do, their rightwing supporters will coolly bat away criticism by citing Labour’s precedent.
Seventy years ago the architects of the welfare state recognised from the experience of the interwar years that social provision only for the poor became poor social provision, and that a universal system would be sustainable only if all contributors shared in the benefits. Does Mr Miliband somehow imagine that these principles no longer hold, when our government again promotes the distinction between the deserving and the undeserving poor, embraces interwar monetary and fiscal policy, and sustains levels of inequality not seen since that period?
Robert Boyce
London
•  The communal claims for the advantages of universal benefits have long been outweighed by the disadvantages to those beneficiary groups living on low incomes – especially poor families and pensioners living in poverty. Indeed, it could be argued that universalism has done little to further income equality.
In this context, it is surprising that both your leader column (Labour’s cutting remarks, 4 June) and Polly Toynbee’s comment piece (No big idea. But Labour’s iron man could do the trick, 4th June) welcomed Mr Balls proposals for the abolition of the winter fuel allowance for higher rate tax payers, but ignored the findings of the Institute for Fiscal Studies study reported on the same day (Poorest will pay the price of austerity as top incomes rise, 4 June).
The question for Mr Balls is: where is Labour’s commitment to a far more progressive system of taxation to prevent the predicted rise in income inequality between 2011-12 and 2015-16 and beyond?
Professor Mike Stein
Social Policy Research Unit, University of York
•  I am sorry to see the Guardian joining Ed Balls’s attack on universal age-related benefits, especially as the cost of the winter fuel allowance amounts only to small change in the total of government expenditure. Young people started by getting landed with university tuition fees of about a thousand pounds. In a decade and a half the figure has multiplied by nine. Removal of age-related benefits may begin with people paying higher-rate tax. How long before it excludes anyone on more than basic state pension?
Alan Harrison
Walsall
•  Polly Toynbee’s call for Ed Miliband to show some “vision” is likely to be met, but restricting it to policies for redressing the damage inflicted by this government on welfare, the NHS and the economy will not be enough to arouse much enthusiasm for Labour among a public that sees little difference between the parties.
Many people are angry that the privatisation of our service industries has resulted in poor service, high prices and loss of control. Now the coalition want to privatise our Royal Mail, which will have similar consequences.
A statement by Ed Miliband that, if this goes ahead, a Labour government would take Royal Mail back into public ownership, with compensation of no more that the original investment being paid over a period of say 10 years. Together with a commitment to place other privatised industries under close scrutiny, this would liven up election prospects and help to revitalise the party.
Bill Banning
Birmingham
•  Taxing benefits like winter fuel allowance would be a better way to address unfairness while maintaining universality. But Labour needs to fry some bigger fish. How about the £40bn a year spent on pension tax relief that mainly goes to the better off?
Stephen Burke
Director, United for All Ages
•  If the £200 per annum now paid as winter fuel allowance were simply added to the state pension, it would not be paid to any men under 65 (at present all people over the women’s retirement age can claim it) and would be taxed.
John Illingworth
Bradford, West Yorkshire

The controversy over the recently published fifth edition of psychiatry’s Diagnostic and Statistical Manual produced a dubious analogy between classification and maps by Simon Wessely (Psychiatric disorders: all in the mind? 24 May). He went on to suggest that both are provisional and may be redrawn as circumstances change. Of course, historically, the great redrawers of maps have been the colonial powers. Pursuing the analogy, then, leads us to consider the results of the long-term consequences of drawing artificial boundaries where there have been none in the past. Eleanor Longden is simply a human example of just how difficult it is to get out of one of the DSM’s categories once put into it.
However, in honour of the spirit of the DSM’s colonialisation of all of human experience, I here propose a new category: pigeonhole compulsion – the pressing need to describe and sort into categories all of human behaviour. Such processes have a long and distinguished history from the simple introvert/extrovert dichotomy through the ninefold Enneagram, the 16 Personality Type Portraits to the DSM itself.
But finally, once allocated to one of their boxes, don’t you dare act in a nonconforming way – else they’ll have to do it all over again.
David C Blest
Dilston, Tasmania, Australia
• If a classification system is like a map, then social grounding is the compass required to orientate it. A purely biomedical approach severs the individual from the group and the medical from the relational, distancing the health professional from the humanity of psychology. This is of limited use in the landscape of mental health, where intimate knowledge of unique personality and struggle is paramount in navigating a way through the wilderness. Formalising a bio-psycho-social system of approach to psychiatric disorders is challenging because several valuable systems of thought are required to co-operate, but surely mental health is worthy of thinking as complex as the human mind it serves.
Edward Tikoft
Leeming, Western Australia
• Previous editions of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual have suffered important limitations and it seems likely that this will also be the case for DSM-5. Unfortunately, your examination of this latest edition missed the most substantive issues, focusing instead on a loose tangle of false dichotomies and non sequiturs. Most salient were the repeated stumbles into mind-body dualism, with the persistent message that mental disorders do not reflect biological processes.
Of course, evidence for demonic possession may be just around the corner, but few disagree that mental processes are produced by the physical brain. “Bereavement and loss, poverty and discrimination, trauma and abuse” – these can only influence mental life via neural events.
The apparent danger in conceding this trivially obvious point is the belief that biologically based problems require pharmacological solutions. This is simply not so. “Non-biological” treatments such as cognitive behaviour therapy (CBT) and mindfulness training do not nurture the soul or charge our psychic batteries – they impact on processes in the brain. This is both a logical necessity and an empirically demonstrable fact. Confusion and ill-informed critique are unfortunately an ongoing challenge for psychiatry and clinical psychology – as this article aptly demonstrates.
Luke Smillie
Collingwood, Victoria, Australia
Mugabe is a pariah
Robert Mugabe is the pariah of Africa because he betrayed everything that he represented himself to be when Zimbabwe achieved independence in 1980 (The rehabilitation of Mugabe, 17 May). The promise of Mugabe the “schoolteacher, freedom fighter and political prisoner” was soon replaced by Mugabe the tyrant. Mugabe’s ostracism is not the product of some diabolical scheme by forces outside of Zimbabwe to disparage its leader. Rather, the reputation simply is a reflection of Zimbabwe’s current state under 30-plus years of Mugabe’s dictatorship.
The economic basket case that Zimbabwe has become in the wake of Mugabe’s land redistribution and other failed economic programmes speaks for itself. What once was the “breadbasket of Africa” is now simply another African post-colonial state with a failed economic infrastructure. Under the guise of being democratically elected, Mugabe’s Zanu-PF party has engaged in every conceivable type of voting irregularity with the sole purpose of maintaining Mugabe’s hold on power. Your article itself makes reference to censorship and civil rights abuses that have been constant features of Zimbabwean society since Mugabe assumed power.
The question that must be asked is the following: what is the motivation behind the current exercise in historical revisionism? Your article hints that the greater forces at work may be the UK and EU attempting to seize an economic advantage in a post-Mugabe Zimbabwe.
Eric J Smith
Bloomfield, Michigan, US
Consumers are irresponsible
I read Lucy Siegle’s piece on the Rana Plaza catastrophe (Fashion still doesn’t give a damn, 10 May) and broadly agree with her. But I do have my doubts about her hope that “consumers will be jolted into action”. As it is, there is a whole lot of injustice directly related to our retail habits from oil demand creating conflict to palm oil decimating rainforests, but so far we consumers don’t seem to be all that bothered. For example, at the Iraq demos we waved banners saying “no blood for oil” but a decade later we still aggressively demand both cheap petrol and cheap flights even though there is blood in that oil. This convinces me that it will be no different with clothing.
As for the theme of “exploitation”, I’d like to mention a 2007 £2 coin that I have that celebrates the bicentennial of the abolition of the slave trade (in 1807). Slavery was abolished in Britain but cotton mills in England were using slave-produced cotton right up until the end of the US civil war. Here I can’t see much difference between the sourcing of cotton for British mills in 1860 and the current trend for western retailers to outsource production to ultra-low-wage regions and then wash their hands of the suffering caused.
Things cannot be left to the discretion and the conscience of consumers –we are greedy and irresponsible. No, we need hard-and-fast rules that will put some humanity back into the system. My first suggestion would be a formula that displays the ratio between the price of an article offered in a western shop and the money paid to the workers who produced that item. That shouldn’t be too difficult to implement and then, progressively, we should crank down the ratio allowed.
Maybe your readers have further concrete measures that they could suggest.
Alan Mitcham
Cologne, Germany
The crimes of empire
David Cameron deserves at least some credit for expressing “regret” over the massacre of 379 Indians at Amritsar in 1919, but he stopped short of apology – whatever good that would have done. But as William Dalrymple writes (1 March), the Amritsar massacre was only the tip of the iceberg of British atrocities committed in India. That’s before we move on to Burma, China, Aden, Cyprus and just about everywhere else in the glorious British empire.
No doubt we can find similar, or even worse, in the Spanish, Portuguese, French and Dutch empires: but we were always ready to believe that the British empire was kind, and just, and benevolently administered. We assume that we are better than other nations, we have an awareness of justice, and that however ridiculed, we have a keen sense of decency and fair play.
I wonder how we can square that with the upcoming accusations of murder, torture, rape and mutilation committed by British soldiers in Kenya during the Mau Mau insurrection, and more recently in the Iraq war? Good heavens, we don’t do things like that!
But there is uncomfortable evidence of just such things happening, and they are not distant events in the past that can be comfortably brushed off with regrets and apologies. They are within our current or recent activities, and must be given account for.
Is it any wonder that the hatred that has been engendered against us by our past brutalities is now being made manifest in our very streets? Memories of atrocities don’t just die; they reverberate through generations.
We have to look behind our shock and horror at what happened in Woolwich to an innocent drummer (31 May), and realise that simply opening the wallet and paying off mutilated Kenyans and tortured Iraqis will not in any way discharge our guilt or keep our credibility intact.
David Bye
Kosd, Hungary
Animal rights champion
Carole Cadwalladr’s piece on Ingrid Newkirk exhibited some of the major faux pas of bad journalism (Peta’s leader can’t resist provocation, 17 May). Her article was highly subjective and emblematic of the primitive thinking postured by many: that it is acceptable to torture and eat whatever creatures we desire while simultaneously exempting others purely because we deem them cute or companionable.
Animal “processing” or slaughter is conveniently kept out of sight. Their flesh is neatly packaged. There is no accountability or unpleasantness incurred by the consumer.
Our animal shelters, even in the affluent locations such as Williamsburg, Virginia, where I have volunteered, receive so many animals, many of which are surrendered for the most trite reasons of inconvenience. Only a small proportion of these find new adoptive homes. There is simply no other option than painless euthanasia. Naive thinking indeed, to refer to it as an “idiosyncrasy”.
I applaud Newkirk and other individuals like her who are passionate, who have integrity and a sense of personal accountability.
Annie Thompson
Hobart, Tasmania, Australia
Authenticating existence
I loved Charlie Brooker’s musings on human communication (10 May). On the count of PLEASE AUTHENTICATE MY EXISTENCE, few would get away with the not-guilty verdict. The OED’s word of the day seems to capture the spirit of the article rather succinctly: “Captcha: Any of various authentication systems devised to enable a computer to distinguish human from computer input, typically in order to thwart spam or to prevent automated misuse of a website (…) Etymology: Acronym < the initial letters of completely automatic public Turing test to tell computers and humans apart, with punning allusion to capture, n."
I'm not being facetious but having one's existence authenticated is both an existential requirement and a pleasant pastime.
Cleo Cantone
Sale, Morocco
Briefly
• Steven Moss (24 May) says that "with the exception of Tennyson, poetry saw a sorry falling-off after the glories of the 18th century".
Is he not familiar with Matthew Arnold or John Clare, Thomas Lovell Beddoes, James Thomson, or of Christina Rossetti, whose life almost exactly fills the reign of Queen Victoria? Are the works of Tennyson superior to those? I don't think so.
Harold Taskis
Toowoomba, Queensland, Australia
• I certainly look forward to eating insects, but it depends a lot on what the insects have eaten before I eat them, and also it matters greatly as to what vintage the insects have drowned in (24 May).
William Emigh
Victoria, British Columbia, Canada
• What an unhappy reflection on a cultural practice is the photograph of Pal brides in Bhopal (24 May) in which not one of the 40 or more brides is smiling and those in the front row appear to be holding handkerchiefs, presumably to dab the tears from their eyes. I cannot remember such a sad photo.
David Haines
Exeter, NSW, Australia
• "Methought I was enamoured of an ass", muses Titania on waking from her flower-power trip (10 May). Not "beloved".
Tut tut.
Elizabeth Silsbury
Tusmore, South Australia

Independent:

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The badger cull is proving to be a highly contentious issue, not least within the veterinary profession in Britain, of which we are members.
Last month, in the lead-up to “open season” for the “pilot culls” in which more than 5,000 badgers could be shot in Gloucestershire and Somerset, both the president of the British Veterinary Association (BVA) and the Government’s Chief Veterinary Officer came out in support of the Government’s plans. Their support comes in spite of the overwhelming scientific opinion that culling badgers will not help to reduce TB in cattle, and amidst grave concerns over the impact that culling will have on the welfare of badgers and the future of many populations.
In The Independent on 30 May the Chief Veterinary Officer made a startling assertion: that culling badgers will somehow protect human health, in spite of his department’s description of the risk to human health in the UK as being “negligible” in an article in the Financial Times on March 31. Such irresponsible scaremongering smacks of a CVO desperately clutching at straws to justify a policy that has no basis in science.
The British Veterinary Association reached its position of support for the Government’s pilot culls without consulting its full membership, and has ignored subsequent calls from veterinarians and one of its own member societies for it to reconsider. The public needs to understand that the BVA’s position is not necessarily representative of majority veterinary opinion, and that many vets oppose or have serious reservations about the policy.
Rather, it represents the position of an organisation that, in our view, has lost touch with its key purpose of providing leadership and guidance on animal welfare on this issue and whose judgment is being influenced by a close historic alignment with the farming industry. Their failure to respond to very serious concerns raised over the humaneness assessment is damning.
We are saddened that this episode brings shame upon the profession we studied so hard to join. That some vets in positions of influence appear to have abandoned precaution for the sake of what appears to be political and perceived economic expedience, casts a dark shadow over our profession. In our opinion these actions damage the credibility of the profession and bring it into disrepute.
We can only hope that its future leaders will adopt a more precautionary, independent, science-led and, most importantly, empathetic and welfare-led approach to the issues facing all of the animals with whom we share our world. Young vets have much to learn from this sorry episode and much to gain by aiming to do better than some of their predecessors.
Caroline Allen; Heather Bacon; Fiona Dalzell; Bronwen Eastwood; Richard Edwards; Mark Jones; Andrew Knight; J Lewis; Alastair MacMillan; Iain McGill; Andre Menache; Paul Torgerson
Humane Society International/UK, London N1
To prevent the spread of bovine tuberculosis, the government in England is planning to cull badgers, based on science; while the government in Wales is planning to vaccinate badgers, based on science. Could someone explain why the science is so very different in two adjacent countries?
Rose Davies, Swansea
Lobby sleaze on Planet Westminster
Yet again, ordinary citizens can see that there is one range of rules for us and quite another for our elected “representatives” and senior bureaucrats. Westminster is no longer its own “village”; it is on another planet.
In spite of the Coalition’s commitment in 2010 (and again earlier this year) to introduce a statutory register of lobbyists and recall regulations, nothing has been done. So we now know that we still have MPs and peers who know they can continue raking in personal loot with little if any chance of being found out or accountable … until someone on our planet takes action.
Such people should immediately lose their seat or peerage and any publicly funded benefit they would otherwise be entitled to, just as any member of staff acting against their employer’s interests in a commercial company or not-for-profit organisation would face immediate dismissal.
Until our political system rejoins our planet, why should we comply with the set of rules imposed on us by those who can’t even stick to their own set?
Malcolm MacIntyre-Read, Much Wenlock, Shropshire
Well, the PM and his Cabinet have the answer to peers and MPs getting caught for cash for lobbying. Have a meeting, pass out the champagne, party hats, streamers and crackers and use the jokes from inside to play policy games.
What trade unions have to do with stings by reputable journalists on MPs and peers beggars belief.
Paul Raybould, Torquay
Another scandal, and the political classes distract the public with a proposed “lobbyists’ register”. If such a register is set up, politicians will be easily able to differentiate between lobbyists and investigators, so this is about protecting themselves, rather than the public.
Gavin Lewis, Manchester
Welby nonsense on gay marriage
I was appalled but not surprised by the Archbishop of Canterbury’s comments on equal marriage in the Lords on Monday.
The arrogance of the church in attempting to restrict a civil ceremony is extraordinary, and for us gays to be blamed for “weakening” and “abolish[ing]” marriage and the family is just puerile nonsense. I am a member of the Bishop’s Council in this diocese and it makes me ashamed to call myself an Anglican.
The bill isn’t perfect; if the church really cares, it would constructively engage. It hasn’t. The Church of England deserves its irrelevant status and will lose more and more members the less it grapples with reality.
Telling me a civil partnership is “good enough” is tripe; it isn’t good enough. And the majority of the population of the UK agree with me.
Charlie Bell, Queens’ College, Cambridge
If anyone doesn’t agree with gay marriage then surely it should simply be a matter of them not getting married to a gay person?
Alan Gregory, Stockport
Give the Russians a chance in Syria
We all share Peter Popham’s despair at the disaster that has engulfed Syria (World View, 31 May). As he recognises, Western interventions in the Muslim World have not gone to plan. Why does he assume the Russians would do worse?
Britain has a diplomatic service and many experts in Middle East affairs. One of my worries is that local ambassadors seem to have not much influence on Foreign Secretaries. The urge of the Government each time is to listen to the US and to note the perception of the public. In the absence of a lead from President Obama “something must be done” takes over as the driver .
Popham recognises, I hope, that the opposition in Syria has been taken over by jihadists. He might also agree that the present government has ruled over a secular state. Might not the Russians want to return to that model?
Hugh Mackay, Edinburgh
Who are these ‘rich’ pensioners?
As a pensioner who has seen his small investment income decimated since 1997, and whose private pension has not received a discretionary increase in 13 years, can somebody please tell me who these “rich” pensioners are whom Labour say they are going to strip of their heating allowance, although they will have already paid for it in their taxes?
Despite my experience of the past 16 years, and I suspect that of many thousands of others in the same boat, we will be targeted once again. “Rich” is such a politically nasty, emotive, word these days, in the mouths of Labour politicians, who use it to describe, in the main, those people who all their lives have done the right thing.
Is flirting with Ukip worth it, if we get such destructive people back in government again?
Alan Carcas, Liversedge, West Yorkshire
Thank Ken for the Boris bike
I realise that it was only an aside from Simon Calder (“Changing trains à grande vitesse”. 1 June), but I feel a correction is important. The London bike scheme was not taken from Paris by Boris Johnson, it was taken by Ken Livingstone.
In 2004, when I was Deputy Mayor of London, Ken sent me over to see the Paris Vélib scheme, and subsequently put it into Transport for London planning. I urged Ken to install the scheme before the 2008 election, but the planning took too long a time, with the result that Boris got the (unearned) credit. Another example of the winners writing history as they want it seen.
Jenny Jones, Green Party Group, London Assembly
Magazines on the wrong shelf
You report on possible legal proceedings against shops that sell “lads’ mags” (27 May). I would like to point out that in most shops the men’s interest section contains the music and film magazines.
Why are they in there? Surely film and music transcend gender. When I would like to buy a copy of any of these magazines I am forced to stand next to a bloke looking at Nuts whilst the staff look on with bemused glances. How is it fair that women interested in film and music are forced to look at “lads’ mags” while searching for the magazines they want?
Paige Coates, Hull,  East Yorkshire
Following orders
Guy Keleny asks in his “Errors and Omissions” column (25 May) whether anything can be “most excellent”. In our honours system, the answer is yes: the OBE is, in full, the “Most Excellent Order of the British Empire”. Mr Keleny may wish to join those who campaign to have the honour renamed the “Order of British Excellence” on the pedantic grounds that the sun has set on the aforesaid empire.
Charlie Robertson, Royal Leamington Spa
Rape as theft
Perhaps Vaughan Thomas (letter, 4 June), trotting out the tired old “unlocked car” analogy for rape yet again, would care to supply a map of which areas of everyday life do not constitute “some dubious area of one of our inner cities” for women?
Stephie Coane, Harrow, Middlesex

Times:

Sir, Your report (June 3) that Jonathan Stephens is being pushed out of his Permanent Secretary post on the say-so of the Culture Secretary Maria Miller is perhaps regrettable but hardly surprising.
It can be seen as the latest in a string of enforced departures of civil servants which started after the 1997 general election. In the two years after Tony Blair came to power some two dozen heads of information in the then Government Information Service (GIS) were either removed, bullied and badmouthed, bypassed or otherwise dispensed with.
In evidence to the Commons Public Administration Committee at the time, more than one of us voiced the suspicion that the “mainstream” of the Civil Service stayed silent and let this happen in the belief that ministers, having culled the GIS — and, in many cases, moved in their party placemen and women as replacements — would now call a halt.
They were wrong: while the pace of departures may have slowed, the appetite for what (in a letter to these pages in 1998) I called the “Washingtonisation” of the Civil Service is undiminished, witness — as you report — the success of Michael Gove and Philip Hammond in having their Permanent Secretaries removed. I would not object to any Secretary of State choosing his or her Permanent Secretary or similarly senior figure, provided always the choice was made from among qualified candidates who had passed through the Civil Service selection procedure.
Ministers are, in the main, short-term holders of departmental briefs; to allow them to extend their own “short termism” to the Civil Service by choosing the key post-holders in their departments seems to me to be a sure-fire recipe for confusion, loss of momentum and lack of direction every time there is a change of Minister.
Andy Wood
Director of Information, Northern Ireland Office 1987-97, Holywood, Northern Ireland
Sir, Having served in the Home Office, the Ministry of Defence and the Central Office of Information, it is quite clear to me that the Government, having already destroyed the morale of the Civil Service, is now out to destroy its impartiality.
In the past, experienced senior civil servants have often been able to save ministers of all parties from their own stupidity. If we lose this essential body of knowledge this country will be on a dangerous downward slope.
Barry Richardson
Isham, Northants

‘A lack of equal opportunities is damaging for individuals. It also leaves the country’s economic potential unfulfilled’
Sir, The case for opening opportunities to all young people is not just a moral one. We can all agree on the principle that you should be able to achieve your ambitions no matter where you have come from, but it also makes good business sense.
If we don’t find the best talent to create a dynamic workforce that reflects our client base, we will lose business. A lack of equal opportunities is damaging for individuals. It also leaves the country’s economic potential unfulfilled.
Some of the UK’s biggest and best businesses are already doing great work. But we need to do much more to improve fair access. Today we are challenging other businesses to open up opportunities to a wider talent pool.
Closed minds close doors, which ultimately limits our success. By opening our doors to more talented youngsters through fair recruitment, we can create greater opportunities both for them and our organisations.
None of us can afford to waste talent. Today the Deputy Prime Minister is launching the Opening Doors campaign to celebrate the opportunities that have already been created for disadvantaged young people across the UK.
More than 150 companies have already joined the campaign to do more to raise aspirations and recruit fairly. We would like to take this opportunity to call on all businesses — SMEs and large corporates alike — to join the campaign to attract a wider range of talent.
We believe that talent is the best way for us to secure future success for our businesses and for Britain.
James Caan (Hamilton Bradshaw); Peter Searle (Adecco) chair and deputy chair, Opening Doors business awards; Ronan Dunne (Telefonica UK); Chris Bush (Tesco); Andy Clarke (Asda); Gail Rebuck (The Random House Group); Ashok Vaswani (Barclays Bank); Antonio Simoes (HSBC); Duncan Tait (Fujitsu); Richard Howson (Carillion); Ian Powell (PwC); Dalton Philips (Morrisons); Simon Collins (KPMG); Steve Varley (Ernst & Young); David Morley (Allen & Overy); Dick Tyler (CMS Cameron McKenna); David Bickerton (Clifford Chance); Dr Tony Cocker (E.ON); Chris Grigg (The British Land Company); Michel Van Der Bel (Microsoft); Roland Aurich (Siemens); Robin Southwell (EADS)

It is not necessary to have a degree in the relevant subject in order to teach; and at what level does one become an engineer?
Sir, I am surprised and disappointed that Professor Campbell (letter, June 1), emeritus professor of electromagnetism, suggests that a degree in a relevant subject is necessary to communicate knowledge, because that would automatically exclude from The Conversation the father of his field, that great communicator and experimentalist, Michael Faraday, who started out a mere bookbinder and was the antithesis of elitism in science.
Dr Nick Winstone-Cooper
Laleston, South Wales
Sir, At what point in Professor Mair’s world (letter, June 3) does one become an engineer? Completing an apprenticeship, achieving NVQs, ONC, OND, HNC, HND, first degree, masters, or doctorate? Or is it only becoming a chartered engineer or university professor that counts?
Professor Mair says, “To equate the maintenance staff to engineers is as bad as being told that an engineer will come to service one’s boiler. What message does this give to pupils, teachers and parents, etc?”
What message does his letter send to aspiring, young heating engineers, or even aspiring, young aircraft maintenance engineers or “staff”, their teachers and parents? Seemingly that they are not quite good enough.
Kenneth Camsey
Newton Aycliffe, Co Durham

The Rural Payments Agency needs to ensure that farmers are managing their soil sustainably, rather than dredging rivers and small streams
Sir, Brian Clarke (“Muddying the waters will not solve river problems”, June 3) made the case very well for a precautionary approach to dredging rivers. In most cases dredging makes flooding worse downstream and does untold damage to wildlife and fisheries. We don’t want to return to the bad old days of the 1960s and 1970s when many rivers were wrecked by misguided attempts to hurry precious freshwater out to sea.
I suggest that farmers with standing water in their fields examine their soil structure to see if it has become impermeable due to compaction from use of heavy machinery. Farmers who follow a soil management plan find that water soaks into the soil more readily, which also reduces pesticide and fertiliser run-off to nearby streams and keeps valuable, finite topsoil in the fields. Such plans are meant to be required for payment of subsidies, but compliance is rarely checked. If the Secretary of State for the Environment wishes to reduce the impact of flooding, he would do better to direct his Rural Payments Agency to ensure that farmers are managing their soil sustainably, rather than authorising unregulated dredging of our country’s precious rivers and small streams.
Mark Lloyd
Angling Trust & Fish Legal

Why do the Coronation ceremonies and services continue to use the archaic ‘thee, thou and why’ instead of the modern alternatives?
Sir, With regard to Professor Humberston’s father being awarded two Coronation Medals (letter, June 3), my late friend and colleague, Oliver Whiting, Bandmaster of the South Wales Borderers, 1955 to 1969, was not only awarded the two medals but actually took part in both events — in 1937, as a boy chorister of St Paul’s Cathedral, he sang at the Service; in 1953, he was in the participating Band of the Royal Military School of Music, Kneller Hall, while a student bandmaster there.
John Curtis
Chelmsford, Essex
Sir, The Westminster Abbey service was, as ever, a magnificent spectacle. Why oh why, though, must the clergy persist in its use of the obsolete thee, thou and thy?
Even the Prime Minister was obliged to use ye instead of you, when the New English Bible is available.
Use of the modern vernacular takes nothing away from the beauty of prayer. We are in the reign of Elizabeth the Second, not the First.
Barry Hyman
Bushey Heath, Herts

Telegraph:

SIR – It is not often realised that the increase in badgers has led to a vast decrease in the hedgehog population (report, June 1). Badgers and vehicles are the hedgehog's only predators. Hedgehogs use their ability to curl up and use their prickles as defence against predators, but badgers can open the prickly ball and help themselves to the contents.
Only by reducing the number of badgers may we be able to save a much-loved species from extinction.
Richard Lucy
Ledbury, Herefordshire

SIR – Since corporate bodies do not have a vote, though they do pay taxes, lobbying is the only way in which they can make their voices heard. There is nothing wrong with lobbying, provided it is transparent.
A register of lobbyists should be maintained in which it is obligatory for individual lobbyists to register; failure to do so becomes a criminal offence. MPs should also be obliged to register whom they are talking to, and whom they act for; failure to register such interests would result in the MP being banned from Parliament until the next election.
Peter Ruck
Dorking, Surrey
SIR – As the next scandal hits Parliament, one ponders on the fact that there are only 650 MPs in this august body.
How many more scandals can such a small number absorb before they, and their office, are all irretrievably tainted?
Related Articles
The badger cull will help to save the hedgehog
04 Jun 2013
Charles Holden
Lymington, Hampshire
SIR – The Daily Telegraph did an amazing job uncovering the MPs’ expenses scandal, but the latest scandal shows that the system is still being abused. MPs and members of the Lords, if found to be involved in corrupt practices, are not adequately penalised. What has happened to the old-fashioned honour and justice, where one paid for one’s misdemeanours?
Peter Lewis
Rayleigh, Essex
SIR – There are two aspects of the recent revelations that are particularly worrying.
First, we are governed by politicians who repeatedly fall for journalists who trick them by working on their greed and willingness to circumvent rules.
But the biggest concern is that the Leveson Inquiry could eventually lead to parliamentary involvement in the freedom of the press. The rules of conduct, for members of both Houses, seem to be easily bypassed. I bet rules to control the press, which emanated from those who do not want to be exposed, would not be open to such loose interpretation.
Clive Cowen
Ramsden, Oxfordshire
SIR – If Patrick Mercer is forced to resign as an MP, a sensational by-election will be triggered. Mr Mercer enjoyed a comfortable majority in Newark, but until 2001, the seat had been held for four years by Labour.
Since Eastleigh, a strong swing away from the Conservatives is likely. Should Labour regain the seat or Ukip make gains, the crisis tearing the Tories apart could spiral.
Anthony Rodriguez
Staines-upon-Thames, Middlesex
SIR – Well done for exposing corruption in the lobbying process at Westminster.
Will you now move on to MEPs and the European Commission? It is possible that corrupt practices are present in lobbying the EU, where the rewards are greater.
Frank Tomlin
Billericay, Essex
Winter fuel allowance
SIR – For the first time in my life I find myself agreeing with Ed Balls, the shadow chancellor (“Labour: we would axe winter fuel payments for 'richer’ pensioners”, report, June 3). The winter fuel allowance should be abolished, along with Christmas bonus payments.
The amounts saved, together with the savings on administrative costs, should be added to the state pension. The tax-free limit would be adjusted to ensure non-taxpayers are not penalised and the rest of us would pay tax at the appropriate rates.
This would avoid the stigma of means-testing and eliminate yet another layer of bureaucracy to administer such.
Colin A Comery
Harpenden, Hertfordshire
SIR – Why not start paying the winter fuel allowance only when people reach the official retirement age?
Despite being beneficiaries of the current scheme, many of my friends and I have never been able to understand why somebody in full employment, with another five years of earnings to be had, should receive this payment. Starting the allowance at the same time as state pensions would save an awful lot of money.
Derek Faulkner
Sheppey, Kent
SIR – Ed Balls assures us that the next Labour government will finish the job of mending the economy where this Government has failed. Since Mr Balls was instrumental in creating the inherited economic mess which has so burdened the Coalition, one would hope he has more imaginative cards up his sleeve than axing winter fuel payments.
All that is needed with regard to winter fuel payments is for governments to make it easy for recipients to gift the money to charity, or return it to the Treasury.
B E A Pegnall
Falmouth, Cornwall
Prosecutions for porn
SIR – The National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children has called for “effective measures” to curb the ease with which extreme pornography and indecent images of children can be accessed (report, May 31).
When these images are found by the police on people’s computers, are any efforts made to trace who has put them on the internet? Are they ever prosecuted?
Diana Smurthwaite
Newton Abbot, Devon
Dying bookshops
SIR – If any of your readers are wondering why so many bookshops are closing, then the new book by Dan Brown, Inferno, is a clear illustration. With a cover price of £20, it is available at Waterstones at half price, on Amazon at £9 and at my local Sainsbury’s for £6 (when you spend £30).
As a bookseller, I would get 35-40 per cent profit if ordering from the publisher. What chance does the independent bookseller have when the large companies cream off the fast-selling titles, leaving independents to survive on the obscure ones?
Chris Barmby
Tonbridge, Kent
Footloose
SIR – Like Henry Winter (report, June 1), I, too, was impressed during a visit to Copacabana beach in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Boys were playing volleyball solely with their feet.
And we thought that to play snooker well was a sign of a misspent youth.
Michael Gorman
Guildford, Surrey
Bishops and marriage
SIR – Who are the senior officials of the Church of England who have warned bishops to stay away from the House of Lords vote (report, June 3)? Aren’t the bishops the senior officials of the Church?
Viscount Astor (Comment, June 3) also warns off opponents of the Bill, making the point that it threatens the constitutional relationship between the House of Commons and the House of Lords. But if the House of Lords acquiesces on this, what is the point of having a second chamber? Why is there so much pressure to steamroller all opposition to a Bill which will not only wreck the age-old institution of marriage, but also threaten our national structures?
Some people are determined to force it through without any mandate and without any regard for the reasoned arguments against it. Opposition should be firm.
Phil Paterson
Manchester
SIR – Liberal thinkers are dominating the Church of England if it is possible for intense internal pressure to be put on bishops not to block gay marriage.
To imply that blocking gay marriage may reopen questions about the right of bishops to sit in the House of Lords is an empty threat about something that may or may not happen anyway. There is little point in sitting in the House of Lords if one cannot vote according to one’s conscience.
Geoff Milburn
Glossop, Derbyshire
Meeting mountaineers
SIR – Like Nancy Hand (Letters, May 31), I also met all of the Everest team not long after the ascent when they held a reunion in north Wales.
My now wife and I had spent a weekend climbing on Tryfan, but on our last day there we went down to Pen-y-Gwryd. Colonel John Hunt came into the room where we were sitting, followed at intervals, to our surprise and delight, by the other Everest mountaineers. Needless to say, we were too overawed to speak to them.
Geoffrey Geere
Abingdon, Oxfordshire
SIR – Paul Corser’s excellent ideas for streamlining Everest’s tourism offer (Letters, May 30) can be improved on.
Why not build a summit helipad to enable time-pressed thrill-seekers the opportunity to tick off another experience from their lists?
Gareth Pryce
Hayling Island, Hampshire
Working long shifts is detrimental to surgeons
SIR – As an occupational health and safety practitioner, I am a little puzzled by Richard Collins’s letter (June 1) stating that the compromising of surgical outcomes at weekends is in some way down to the European Working Time Regulations.
These rules were the result of a number of studies on working patterns, examining the effects of long shifts on people’s long-term health and wellbeing, and the increase in errors committed by those who had worked them.
Some studies have shown a direct correlation between premature death and the working of long shift patterns, much like those that Mr Collins argues should be allowed for his medical colleagues.
More worryingly, the studies identified significant increases in cases of human error within groups of tired workers. Many of these mistakes were further compounded by the fact that colleagues who were supposed to be part of the “checking process” were themselves so tired that they failed to spot obvious errors.
Perhaps rather than blaming a set of regulations, Mr Collins could follow the clinical evidence and offer a solution that doesn’t place both his colleagues and their “customers” at unnecessary risk.
Michael Collins
Stalybridge, Cheshire
SIR – Last week, you reported the poor outcome for patients undergoing surgery on Fridays. On Saturday, there was a report (June 1) on the high incidence of dementia in patients over 65 receiving general anaesthesia.
On Friday, I had my gall bladder removed under general anaesthetic; I’m 70. The excellent surgical and nursing care at West Cornwall Hospital in Penzance gives me hope that all is not lost.
Angela Hamilton
Canterbury, Kent

Irish Times:

Sir, – It was with a sense of resigned déjà vu that I read the article (Front Page, June 4th) on the slow progress in regulating home help.
More than two years ago your paper had extensive coverage of the RTÉ Primetime programme on the lack of regulation in the home care sector. At that time, political parties, without exception, were rushing to the media with their thoughts on lack of regulation in the home care sector. The then Minister of State with responsibility for older people gave the usual knee-jerk response that the government was “examining the options”. Two years later it is extremely disappointing to note that the current Minister of State with responsibility for older people has not moved on the issue.
Firms providing home care under the home care package scheme have a high level of care standards imposed under the public procurement conditions. One quick fix for the Government to bring home care standards to all would be to merge the home help scheme and the home care package scheme together and impose the same procurement conditions on all home care providers. A very quick, effective and simple solution, not requiring legislation. Will we see this happen?
Very unlikely with a Government that never misses an opportunity to miss an opportunity in home care. – Yours, etc,
JONATHON ROTH (Dr),

Sir, – Gary Douch was murdered in a foul and barbaric way while in the custody of the State. That was seven years ago. The then Minister for Justice promised an immediate enquiry.
So far there has been little real progress,to the obvious and understandable distress of Gary’s mother and family.
This is not the fault of Grainne McMorrow SC who conducted the enquiry and it is to accept inevitable delays due to the trial of the killer. But what is unacceptable are the reported long delays by the State in furnishing documents and other material to Ms McMorrow (Home News, June 3rd )
We have seen more than enough in recent years of public bodies acting slowly and not always openly when investigations are launched into their own past responsibilities. At this point it is important that the Minister for Justice confirm if there have been such delays and if so why and by whom. And to give some idea as to when a report may be expected.
The family of Gary Douch has suffered grievously. Alan Shatter owes it to them and to the public to be fully open about the process to date and by so doing that reassure his family that his life did indeed mean something. – Yours, etc,
MAURICE MANNING,

Sir, – It appears that the debate about standards in some creches has become an opportunity to castigate parents. Surely the point is the inadequacy of proper child care facilities in Ireland, not decisions that parents make for the care of their children?
I question the assertion that children are best cared for by their parents in their own home. There are many less than perfect homes. Have we not been appalled to hear of children living in damp and cold rooms, sometimes in one- room bedsits? Parents are far from perfect. They may be ill, tired, dispirited, hassled. They may even have to work to keep the family afloat. Children enjoy the company of other children and are stimulated by the play opportunities in a creche. They are exposed to experiences that many parents might have difficulty providing (such as painting, playing with water or in a sandpit).
One of the best initiatives in recent times has been the free preschool year and the pity is that it cannot be extended. It helps to remove inequalities in our society. Most creches operated to the highest possible standards. The focus now should be on providing purpose-built premises with well-trained, well-paid staff; not on parent-bashing. Those parents who prefer to care for their children in the home should also be supported.
Yes, this will cost money but children are our future. Investment now will yield rich results. – Yours, etc,
ELIZABETH SMITH,

Sir, – I read the article (“Ireland has 50% more nurses than OECD average”, Health + Family, June 4th) with some scepticism. Sure enough, on further investigation of the actual OECD publication (www.oecd.org/ireland), the following reference was added:
“It is important to note however that the comparability of data on nurses is more limited due to the inclusion of different categories of nurses and midwives in the data reported by different countries.”
In other words, different countries may count registered nurses, midwives, auxiliary nurses, etc, as separate entities.
It can only be in the public’s interest to further investigate and then relate the true statistics, or the cynical part of me will have to view this as a further example of disseminating untruths about nursing and by extension the health service as a whole. – Yours, etc,
SHEILA McEVOY, RN,

Sir, – With regard to recent letters about violence in the city centre, I have witnessed terrible incidents. I think it is unproductive to just focus on the drug addicts’ behaviour as separate from the rest of society.
In my view they are showing us that there is a moral vacuum at present in our society. This moral vacuum has mainly come from the delusional belief in the political sphere that the market can solve all issues in politics. This has resulted in management by data and an abdication of the responsibility of leadership.
What is the difference between politicians looking to the market to solve all their problems and the drug addicts looking for drugs to solve all their problems? – Yours, etc,
ELAINE BYRNE,
A chara, – In our rush to privatise and erode our public services, has any one given thought to the unintended consequences of the opening of the waste collection market? Apart from the obvious nuisance of having speeding bin lorries rousing us every morning, Monday to Saturday, has the council noted the damage such heavy traffic is having on the roads and driveways of our housing estates? Perhaps a use has been found for our property taxes? – Yours, etc,
AUSTIN POWER,
Sir, – Tomás Ó Murchú (June 1st) writes that a majority of his final year Irish language students in NUI Galway informed him during course evaluation that he should have spent more time on Peig Sayers’s works, as they enjoyed her. That is great. However, he also states that my feature on the cultural heritage of the Blasket Islands (Life, May 20th) includes comments that are “disparaging towards Peig Sayers”, which is not the case.
I wrote that my own generation of secondary schoolchildren hated reading Peig, a work which was presented to us uncontextualised in terms of the social background from which it emerged, and in a form which failed to represent the earthy humour that was a feature of Blasket island life. For many of us, resentful of the requirement to achieve a pass in Irish in order to pass the Leaving Cert, Peig Sayers’s name represented insult added to injury.
Far from disparaging either the woman or her cultural legacy, I reiterated a point made in my memoir – that the decision to foist Peig’s edited reminiscences on a generation of schoolchildren who, in most cases, had no sense of the struggling communities she described, was an act of folly that deprived them of something of value. No one, therefore, could be happier than I am to know of NUI Galway’s students’ admiration for Peig. Indeed, it was at university that I fell in love with her world and its worldview myself.
I wish, though, that her written legacy retained more sense of the shrewdness and humour which were part of her oral inheritance, still flourishing here in Corca Dhuibhne. – Yourse, etc,
FELICITY HAYES-McCOY,

Sir, – I refer to the reproduction of Paul Henry’s painting, The Potato Diggers (Fine Art & Antiques, June 1st), the original of which has since been sold at auction for a substantial sum.
It occurs to me that the artist’s depiction of his subjects contains an anomaly. He shows them digging on a slope while facing down, and apparently moving backwards up it. As anyone who has handled a spade will know, to dig facing down a slope can be back-breaking work. By contrast, to dig facing up it minimises stooping and with it the digger’s travail. By facing up the slope, starting at the top and moving backwards down it, the diggers in this instance could have saved themselves an amount of back-ache. I doubt if the people of Achill Island in 1910 were so dim as not to appreciate this.
Being no authority on Paul Henry, I hesitate to suggest that he did not know his potatoes. Perhaps there is some symbolism in the stooped posture of the diggers? I feel sure, in any case, that authorities on Henry’s work have long ago spotted the anomaly to which I refer. – Yours, etc,
GERRY LYNE,
Sir, – With no end in sight to curiosity about the remains of King Richard III (Small Prints, May 30th), it may be appropriate to recall a piece of diplomacy involving Richard (1483-1485) and the Earl of Desmond.
The attainder and hasty decapitation of the previous Earl of Desmond in February 1468, during the reign of Richard’s predecessor (and brother) Edward IV, was one of the crimes of the century in England and Ireland. Recognising the injustice of the earl’s execution, Richard sent the Bishop of Annaghdown (Thomas Barrett) to the dead earl’s son and successor, Earl James, with an offer of pardon. Conditions were attached: the violence generated by the execution was to end, and Earl James was to marry an English bride provided by Richard.
The bishop’s embassy was not a success; turmoil continued and the earl married an Irish bride (a daughter of O’Brien of Thomond); finally, at the end of 1487, the earl was murdered by some of his Desmond relatives.
Earl James would have done well to heed Richard’s warnings. The Tudors, shortly to succeed Richard after his defeat and death at the Battle of Bosworth, had none of the sympathy with the Desmonds that distinguished Richard and his predecessors, sympathy founded to some extent on the fact that the Desmonds and the Plantagenets were cousins, and both belonged to a church with the pope at its head.
A memento of the bishop’s embassy to the earl survived: a gift to the earl of a gold collar with Richard’s emblem, a white boar, pendant. It is likely that the boar emblem of the Desmonds dates from the occasion. – Yours, etc,
GERALD O’CARROLL,

Sir, – Ciarán Flynn, general secretary, Association of Community and Comprehensive Schools (May 30th), states that I gave an “unbalanced” view of community and comprehensive schools (Rite & Reason, April 30th) . The only fact on which he corrects me is that Roman Catholic chaplains in VEC community colleges are paid by the State. This confirms my argument that parents who do not wish their children to be exposed to religion in taxpayer-funded schools do not have an option of a truly secular education available to them. The payment of such chaplains, who must be committed Roman Catholics in order to be appointed, indicates the denominational nature of the schools
Mr Flynn states that I do not give evidence that parents’ representatives on boards of management have little influence on decisions. As there are only two parents’ representatives on a board of 11 members, how can parents exercise influence on key decisions? I was a parents’ representative on a community school board of management for four years and on all important issues that came before the board, the wishes of the trustees prevailed.
Mr Flynn claims I was “dismissive” of former members of religious orders who were appointed as principals or teachers in schools where those religious orders were trustees. I did not comment of the competence of those principals or teachers but suggested the religious trustees consolidated their influence in the schools through such appointments.
Mr Flynn mentions the “respectful” multidenominational nature of religious education in community and comprehensive schools and states that non-believing pupils may opt out of religion classes. If such pupils cannot be supervised, opting out is not practicable and even when it is, pupils who opt out may feel uncomfortable.
Mr Flynn states that his association is reviewing the deed of trust governing the community schools. It is to be hoped that the taxpayers who wholly fund these schools will have some say in the formulation of the new deed and that the negotiations will not be conducted in secret as the original negotiations were. At present the religious trustees of many community schools have full legal control of the schools .
If Mr Flynn considers that Catholic religious orders are not the dominant force in the schools which he represents, he should look at the list of past presidents of the Association of Community and Comprehensive Schools. Of the 12 past presidents, five have been members of religious orders and a sixth is a former member of a religious order. – Yours, etc,
SEAN BYRNE,

Irish Independent:
* The South Tipperary Coroner recently highlighted the undeniable link between a sharp increase in suicide in Ireland and the financial pressures many people are under due to debts they owe to financial institutions.
Also in this section
The enemy within
'Cowardly' label unfair
Adios, Matthew
* The South Tipperary Coroner recently highlighted the undeniable link between a sharp increase in suicide in Ireland and the financial pressures many people are under due to debts they owe to financial institutions.
The coroner was critical of the harassment meted out to people who find themselves in this unfortunate situation.
During the economic downturn, there has been considerable evidence that many Irish people have become suicidal because they have found themselves in severe debt either to a financial institution or perhaps to the State itself. Sadly, many have gone on to take their own lives because they were unable to cope with the pressure.
The coroner and others have pleaded with the State and with financial institutions to bring in measures to ease the burden on those in severe debt. However, I have never heard anybody put forward the argument that if someone is suicidal because of a financial debt, then that debt should somehow be eliminated in order to save the person's life.
The legislation now being presented by the Government proposes that when there is a risk to a pregnant woman's life because she is suicidal, action should be taken to remove that which led to her becoming suicidal.
The action to be taken will result not in the elimination of a sum of money but rather another innocent human life. Will this legislation create a legal precedent allowing a case to be made for removing whatever leads someone to be suicidal?
Martin Delaney, PP
Rathdowney, Co Laois
CHILDCARE SILVER LINING
* I read with interest the article by David Coleman on June 1 in relation to the cost of childcare. As a married man with no children, I agree with his conclusion that the tax system is anti-family.
However, he failed to point out a positive unintended consequence. In a time of high unemployment, a lot of families would elect to have one parent stay at home to mind their children. Which would free up a lot of employment opportunities for those on the dole to fill. So not only would a lot of children be given better care at home but it would also have a big impact on the long-term unemployment numbers.
I imagine it costs more to have people on the dole than it does to end tax individualisation. A big win for families, society and the economy.
Caimin Murphy
Address with editor
FORGOTTEN GENERATION
* As a young graduate I was shocked by an article in 'Weekend Review' called "the Jilted Generation". I felt it should more aptly have been called "the Forgotten Generation". It did not touch on the issues affecting my friends here in Ireland who can't afford to travel abroad for work.
This group merely goes unnoticed, experiencing social isolation and a lack of attachment to any sense of community. We are extremely vulnerable individuals with feelings of despair and lack of choice due to the Government glossing over the problem with schemes like Job Bridge.
Whether you are a qualified graduate or an early school leaver, there are few options for those who cannot afford to emigrate and this must change. In fact, whether "jilted" or "forgotten", the scars for my generation will be irreparable.
W Flanagan Tobin
Dublin 3
MARTIN STILL DITHERING
* Micheal Martin's decision to allow a free vote on the abortion issue proves a number of things.
He is still the same ditherer who ran the Department of Health by seeking yet another report on every single issue. His Fianna Fail genes render him incapable of making any decision that would be unpopular anywhere in the country.
The abortion issue is simply not important enough to risk splitting the party, unlike, for instance, the "National Question" so beloved of Fianna Fail.
Anthony O'Leary
Portmarnock, Co Dublin
COUNCIL MADNESS
* In reference to the council boundary changes and the number of councillors allocated on a ratio of one councillor per almost 5,000 people – permit me to say I am confused and disgusted with these figures.
The numbers are bloated beyond explanation. The numbers read as follows: 949 councillors will be elected in 137 electoral areas for 31 local authorities. Space does not permit me to point out how the nation could be run effectively by having 26 electoral areas for three local authorities with a maximum of 60 councillors.
Study the state of California, with 34 million people; it has the equivalent of one local authority, 54 electoral areas, with an equivalent ratio of one "councillor" to almost 500,000 people. California is run efficiently with these numbers.
Vincent J Lavery
Dalkey, Co Dublin
NO SKY AT THE AIRPORT
* While travelling through Dublin Airport recently, I noticed that all the TVs on display were tuned to Sky News. As the Dublin Airport Authority is a state-run public body and thus funded by the Irish taxpayer, I believe they should be seen to be supporting a fellow state body, ie RTE, which broadcasts its own dedicated news channel.
As we all know, first impressions are very important, and as the airport contributes greatly to first impressions of this country, it is disappointing that they are immediately subjected to a foreign news channel, or more appropriately, a Rupert Murdoch-owned news channel.
Patrick Slavin
Lucan, Co Dublin
TEACHING STANDARDS
* While teachers around the country ponder their next move in the pay and conditions dispute, spare a thought for the thousands of young people who will leave school this summer with nothing to show for it.
I wonder are there statistics on poor results from schools? Results that require a cohort of students to repeat year after year. Schools that rarely achieve big numbers for third-level entry. If so, are questions ever asked of those schools or teachers?
I myself went back to school as an adult and saw first hand teachers who could teach and motivate and teachers who could not.
Harry Mulhern
Millbrook Road, Dublin
CLIMATE CHANGE WORRY
* I was pleased to see the article in the Irish Independent recently explaining the unprecedented cold weather in plain language.
Frequently, media outlets are in denial about the reality of the climate change that is already seriously impacting on our economy, both in terms of the very poor yields for farmers as well as the increased damage to householders caused by floods.
We need to wake up to the fact that climate change is happening and that we face increasingly extreme and unpredictable weather in the future.
John Sharry
Clontarf, Dublin
CRYING OVER SPILLED MILK
* I agree with Jack Downey when he says that he "wants to assure the Government that the amount of property tax he would like to pay is €0" (Letters, May 28).
While I empathise with him, I'm afraid he is years too late. The time for all of us to have made our feelings known was during the Celtic Tiger period when a small number of powerful citizens made decisions that bankrupted the country.
A Leavy
Sutton, Dublin 13


Tired

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0
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6 June 2013 Tired

Off around the park oh dear oh dear Everyone has secrets and there is a leak at Captain Povey’s office its only from his radiator, but Admirality thinks its a security leak and start an investigation. Priceless.
Another quiet day awfully tired can hardly move, Secom man comes
We watch The Pallaisers They are married, and and old flame is sniffing around
Mary wins at scrabble but get under 400 perhaps I can have my revenge tomorrow.

Obituary:

Caroline Harris-Jones
Caroline Harris-Jones, who has died aged 92, as a nurse tended to wounded pilots from one of the RAF’s crucial coastal fighter bases during the war; she was also the backbone of a family whose medical history spanned many generations.

Caroline Harris-Jones 
5:03PM BST 05 Jun 2013
The only child of Scottish parents, she was born Caroline Agnes MacKenzie on July 12 1920 at Thornton Heath, Surrey. Her own immediate family were not doctors, but a mid-19th century ancestor – the son of the Duke of Hamilton – forged a career as a Naval surgeon after discovering that he was illegitimate.
Caroline’s own parents were musical and, after the family moved to Croydon, her mother played the organ at the parish church. Caroline attended a convent school and, on leaving, decided to train as a nurse.
As part of her training she spent six months in Edinburgh on a midwifery course, but by the time she had qualified, and was posted to Southend General Hospital, war had broken out, and it was her skill in dealing with trauma injuries that was most in demand. She treated those from every Service but, as Southend airport had been requisitioned and transformed into RAF Rochford, it was the pilots of Supermarine Spitfires and Hawker Hurricane fighters she saw most.
While at Southend she met John Harris-Jones, who was one of an eminent group of doctors at the hospital which included Leslie le Quesne, a future professor of surgery who made it his life’s work to improve survival rates of those undergoing major operations.
John Harris-Jones, himself the son of a doctor, was then serving with the RAMC. He was something of an anti-establishment figure, and military life did not come easily to him. On one occasion he forgot his parade ground commands and directed a platoon into a brick wall.
The war and its casualties provided a rigorous training ground for both of them, and it was not until 1948, two years after he had married Caroline MacKenzie, that John Harris-Jones was demobilised.
The couple moved to Sheffield, struggling to enliven a drab post-war existence marked by rationing and tight budgets. It was tempting to look abroad for solace, and Caroline Harris-Jones had packed the family’s bags in anticipation of a permanent move to Canada, where they had found new jobs, when her husband returned home to tell her that it was all off: he had decided at the last moment that he could not live without cricket.
They moved instead to Swansea, where he rose to become senior physician for west Wales. Caroline Harris-Jones became a leading figure in the local Red Cross, also helping to run her husband’s private practice.
When he died in 1987, aged 68, Caroline Harris-Jones moved to Lymington, where she again became a stalwart of the local Red Cross, and determined to explore the New Forest. She travelled by bicycle into advanced age, proving her determination by undergoing a double knee replacement and returning to the saddle within three months.
She greatly enjoyed bridge, and her membership of the Royal Lymington Yacht Club, as well as tending a beautiful garden.
Caroline Harris-Jones is survived by a daughter, Hilary, and a son, Richard Harris-Jones, who is the long-standing doctor at The Daily Telegraph.
Caroline Harris-Jones, born July 12 1920, died April 29 2013

Guardian:

Your obituary of Lord Gilbert (4 June) refers to the 70s proposals to improve London’s road system, which as a minister he dropped. There were not proposals for “several ringroads” but merely three: one around central London, one roughly on the alignment of the existing North and South Circulars, and one outer orbital around the edges of the outer boroughs.
I was one of the people who worked on those proposals briefly in the early 70s whom Gilbert described as “not very perceptive” and “unambitious”. We ran very well-based computer forecasts then of projected increases in car and freight trips by 1991, and the serious increases in journey times, congestion, and economic costs that would result from a failure to improve the road network.
Those forecasts were amply borne out by what actually happened in London by the late 80s and 90s. Anyone who seeks to travel across London by car or with freight, but with a destination well within the M25, is living with the unacceptable consequences of Gilbert’s decision which your obituary describes as “decisive shrewdness”.
In fact the decision to drop the ringway proposals was largely borne out of an unwillingness by weak politicians to take on the lobby of those whose properties were to be affected by road-building (and to meet the project costs).
The result is a massive and growing conurbation with a totally inadequate strategic road system. Hardly a legacy of which Gilbert could be proud.
Steve Smart
Malvern, Worcestershire

We need a full and sensible debate about out-of-hours care. However, it is essential that we find a complete solution, not a piecemeal one. We are concerned that a system where some patients are treated and others are not – as proposed by the chair of the Royal College of GPs (GP leader offers way to end out-of-hours row, 5 June) – will not work, and will also be unfair and potentially discriminatory.
While out-of-hours care has featured heavily in the news recently, the facts do not support the claim that this is the main cause of pressures on A&E departments. The thousands of GPs who regularly work out-of-hours shifts also report increased demand. This mirrors the bigger workload seen by all GPs as we support more elderly patients with complex health needs while funding has remained static.
The service won’t improve until out-of-hours, urgent and emergency care are properly resourced and integrated with other services. Social services care, community nursing and support services are all part of the solution too. Our patients deserve better than another kneejerk solution that’s not been thought through.
Dr Laurence Buckman
Chair, BMA GPs committee
• Jeremy Hunt says he wants GPs to take back out-of-hours responsibility (Out of GPs’ hands, Society, 5 June). I have written to him twice asking for his support in City and Hackney. He didn’t answer my first letter. He said we could tender for the contract like any other provider in response to my second letter. We have heard him repeatedly state over the last few weeks that GPs taking ownership of out-of-hours care is the way forward to provide safe and effective care for patients out of core GP opening hours. Our clinical commissioning group have been told they cannot “legally” make the decision to give our newly formed social enterprise a contract to do this, although it is the preferred option for the GPs and residents of City and Hackney. In spite of the secretary of state saying that CCGs will be able to decide how they procure services, the contract has to go out to open tender, the costs of which are prohibitive to social enterprises. The law requires it. So if he thinks this is the way forward, why doesn’t he legislate to make it possible? Otherwise all his words are empty.
Deborah Colvin
GP, Hackney
It is inherently wrong that money can buy influence in a modern democracy – and yet this is what is offered for open sale by lobbying firms (Corporate power has turned Britain into a corrupt state, 5 June). There are two simple measures to clean up our democratic system.
The first is to ban professional lobbying. There is no justification for commercial influences to have preferred access to political processes. The second is to ban MPs from taking on consultancy and other activities while an MP, and to publish any payments post-office. The justification for MP salaries is that it enables anyone from any background to become an MP since an independent income is not necessary; given this, it seems farcical that many MPs work many more hours for personal gain that for their constituents who ultimately fund their salaries.
Both these measures would be simple to implement, easy to enforce and would clean up politics no end. They may even remove the people who are in politics for the wrong reasons.
Professor Russell Beale
Market Drayton, Shropshire
• Nigel Farage (This cosy trialogue, 4 June) regards the funding of politicians and their operations as an abuse of the public purse. It’s an argument which in the current climate of public mistrust of parliament is extremely difficult to understand. What is needed is more publicly accountable scrutiny, not less.
The public needs to be reassured that the lobbying of parliament is an open process agreed in advance, case by case, by an independent body inside parliament whose files are open to public scrutiny. If the government wishes to restrict lobbying and funding by the unions then it must also restrict the funding of the Tories by big business or rich individuals. Even better to let this process be funded on an even-handed process by parliament. However, this is but a small part of making parliament more accountable to people. At a period when the percentage of those voting has fallen to an all-time low, why is there no debate about making voting compulsory. What are the parties afraid of?
Dr Simon Harris and Dr Celia Prussia
Wrexham
• Seumas Milne is absolutely right to bemoan the increase in corruption in Britain’s public sector, but his medicine is overly punitive (stop letting this or that happen). What we also need is something that has been lost: a positive endorsement of the concept of public service and its essential place in a civilised society. Forty to 50 years ago, the private sector was damagingly shaded by the public sector. Now the balance has swung too far the other way. Highlighting public service as a value would help restore the balance.
John Webster
London
• Just as the phone-hacking scandal was not ultimately about a handful of dodgy journalists and coppers on the make, so the political lobbying scandal is not really about some rogue lobbyists and a few avaricious MPs. Instead both form part of a much wider scandal about how power and influence are exerted within British society. By focusing narrowly on press regulation, the Leveson inquiry steered well away from any deeper exploration of the dangers corporate power presents to our stuttering democracy. Sadly attempts to investigate and regulate the lobbyists are certain to have a similarly narrow focus.
Stefan Simanowitz
London
• It is disappointing that a good editorial on lobbying (5 June) was let down by the unnecessary statement that Labour’s link with the trade unions is worthy of a rethink. The relationship between the Labour party and the unions ensures that the views of over 3 million working people are represented in politics. The unions and their members provide a bulwark against the vested interests of capital that seeks only to reduce the rights of working people in pursuit of profits. The union movement is profoundly democratic. The suggestion the link needs to be re-examined represents nothing more than an unenlightened attempt to placate those whose ignorance of the issue leads to ill-informed assumptions.
Andy Prendergast
Senior organiser, GMB
• As Frances O’Grady says, this move smacks of political opportunism (PM moves to cut Labour’s union funding, 4 June). I would, however, have no complaint if it were part of an overall reform of party funding; I note Cameron is not cutting business funding of the Tories. The only way to have a level playing field is for all parties to be given modest state funding topped up by individual donations capped at a low level (although, of course, it tends to be Tory supporters who have most wealth to spare). It should also be illegal for any organisation to pay an MP for services to them.
Michael Miller
Sheffield
• The Conservatives will be well aware that reform of party funding – which Labour spent its time in power talking about, but failing to act on – has nothing to do with a register of lobbyists. But that is their masterstroke: by forcing Labour to vote against the bill as presented by the coalition and thus ensure it is lost, they can paint Labour as indifferent to political sleaze yet continue to enjoy the fruits of their cosy relationship with unaccountable corporate interests.
Joseph Nicholas
London
•  As a trade unionist I had to tick a box to allow my union to contribute part of my paltry subscription to the Labour party. As a shareholder, in various companies, I have never been able to affect a part of what would have been my dividend to the Tory party. In 2010, the financial services sector contributed over £11m to the Tories, so the attack on party funding should, in fairness, affect the very big donors and not the accumulation of funds from working people.
Gren Gaskell
Malvern, Worcestershire

I’m interested to learn that Waltham Forest’s Labour council is going to be spending our council tax providing advice through what is left of our tattered library service as to “what vegetables are in demand” (Letters, 4 June). Wouldn’t it be simpler to just take a walk through Walthamstow’s famous street market?
Katy Andrews
London
• Why is everyone in the photo on your front page looking so bored and bemused (By royal appointment, 5 June)? Does the black lollipop lady represent a multicultural Britain? The photographer, Jack Hill, deserves a Queen’s award for services to republicanism.
David Bishop
Nantwich, Cheshire
• I was pleased to read that Sophie Heawood (G2, 5 June) has rediscovered the pleasure of listening to good music on a decent stereo. As Alex said in A Clockwork Orange: “What you got back home little sister, to play your fuzzy warbles on? I bet you got little save pitiful, portable picnic players. Come with uncle and hear all proper! Hear angel trumpets and devil trombones. You are invited.”
Ralph Jones
Rochester, Kent
• Sophie Okonedo as Doctor Who, please (Matt Smith’s departure sparks speculation, 3 June).
Pam Laurance
London
• If the next Doctor Who is to be female, I cannot think of a better actor to play the role than the (slightly unworldly) Tilda Swinton.
David Gibson
Leeds
• With reference to Simon Hoggart’s week (1 June), in what way does the kleptocracy “rob us blind”?
Kevin Carey
Chair, RNIB
• Why are old ladies always referred to as “little” when nearly all my elderly female friends are quite tall (Letters, 4 June)?
Wendy Collins
Batley, West Yorkshire
• They’re going on to the bitter end.
Peter Gibson
Morebath, Devon

Surely Sarah Bell (Letters, 1 June) is missing the point if she is implying that people who are overcrowded can be helped by forcing people with “spare” bedrooms into debt – and potentially into homelessness. Norris Green in Liverpool has over 1,000 families affected by the bedroom tax and many of them describe its implementation as “simply evil”. It is evil because of the way it has been introduced retrospectively. Hundreds of thousands of tenants with the financial support of successive governments have happily made social housing their family home but are now being forced into debt and possible eviction, leading many to despair and some to suicide. Like many I would prefer to see the bedroom tax scrapped completely, but a more humane way of introducing it would be to protect all existing tenants, not just the elderly, and to introduce changes gradually for prospective tenants.
Cllr Alan Walker
Norris Green & Sparrowhall ward, Liverpool

“Pleading with the government” to combat Amazon, “destroyer of bookshops”, is a woeful sign of our times (Booksellers seek Amazon curb, 5 June). Enduring under an oppressive, philistine government has sapped the energy of booksellers. Bookshop viability is undermined by a complex set of factors including: unmatchable discounting from outlets such as Amazon, chainstores, newspapers (even the Guardian); rising ebook sales; the intensive promotion of Kindle; scandalous underfunding of print books in schools and libraries; rising rent and utility costs for our premises in town centres as potential customers are diverted to soulless retail parks. Perhaps we should emulate the French and make culture a political priority. But then our Booksellers Association allows chainstores membership for its services and favours giving away 1 million books on World Book Night. I retire this summer after 22 years as an independent bookseller. So there’s another gap in the crumbling high street.
Malcolm Stanton
Red Balloon Bookshop, Ludlow
•  Bookshops are in a bad way, but Amazon is not the only cause. I retired from 37 years of bookselling seven years ago, but before I went, I had been hit in other ways. A charity bookshop opened, wiping £30k off my takings in its first year. Few could compete with a shop with only a managerial wage, subsidised rates and free stock. The university librarian told me some course organisers had said their students no longer needed the library (and by implication, bookshops). Course packs and downloaded PDF files had seen to that. I went down the standard route to salvation via specialisation; customers would exclaim that they had never seen so many golf books, with whole shelves even on golf course architecture, and then copy down the ISBNs. The books were no cheaper on Amazon, but they didn’t have to carry them home. All power to the campaign for a level playing field, but I fear that some of the bumps in the field cannot be explained simply by curbing Amazon’s financial advantage.
Margaret Squires
St Andrews, Fife

Independent:

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Archie Bland starts his piece “What planet are the Lords living on?” (5 June) by referring to a remark in my speech in the Lords’ same-sex marriage debate that I had been “immensely impressed” by its quality.
That was prelude to his purporting to give any reader  the “chance to make up your own mind” by providing extracts from that debate.
However, he quoted seven carefully selected peers highly selectively from among the 91 who spoke, in order to smear the Lords as a whole. He also failed to point out that we (me amongst them) overwhelmingly rejected the vote to kill the Bill by 390 votes to 148, a greater majority than in the Commons.
There are many failings of which the House of Lords can be convicted, but on this issue Mr Bland should practise what he preaches with regard to gay people, namely fairness. The government minister, Baroness Stowell of Beeston,  winding up the debate, got things right when she concluded (as had others) that it  showed that the Lords “takes its role seriously and is able to deal with controversial and sensitive issues in a measured way that respects differing views.”
Andrew Phillips (Lord Phillips of Sudbury), House of Lords
 
In the Lords debate on gay marriage Baroness Knight reportedly said: “Of course homosexuals are very artistic and delightful people, too.”
As a straight man I have to say I find this comment outrageous, unacceptable, arrogant, prejudiced and an appalling example of the worst kind of stereotyping. Such a view has no place in a forum charged with responsibility for influencing the laws of this country, and shows  yet again that the House of Lords is not fit for this role.
It’s not simply a question of what century Baroness Knight and her like are living in, but what reality.
Stanley Knill, London N15
 
I find it hypocritical that your headline (4 June) puts the House of Lords on trial for potentially “wrecking” the Marriage (Same Sex Couples) Bill while not acknowledging that this Government has taken a decidedly undemocratic approach on the matter.   
This Bill was not in any manifesto prior to the last election; the so-called consultation, which had to be forced upon the Government, ignored a 600,000-strong petition against the Bill; and even this week the Government moved the date of the debate to try and avoid defeat.
Elizabeth Baugh, Reading
 
The price of  revealing US dirty dealings
Thank goodness for your truth teller Owen Jones (3 June), clearly spelling out America’s history of dirty dealings in foreign lands and the need to keep those operations secret. The public needs journalists like Mr Jones to bring these disturbing facts into the public domain, although I despair that his article will not be read by those most in need of enlightening. 
I despair too for Bradley Manning, as he will undoubtedly be paying a very high price for his attempt to bring our attention to the reality behind the smokescreen of keeping us in the West “safe”. Anyone who seriously challenges the military might of America and its allies, will be hounded and punished, including Julian Assange, who has been much criticised. 
We must be very careful not to fall prey to attempts to distract attention away from the content of the material released by WikiLeaks, and on to the personal life of the messenger. This has been done many times before and unfortunately it is often successful. 
Many facts about America’s cruel, ruthless and disfunctional military have been in the public domain (via the internet) for some time, but this issue of, as Owen Jones puts it, the hidden realities of US power and the poorly scrutinised actions of the US foreign policy elite, needs to be highlighted as much as possible in the general media. Your paper is one of the few  that can be depended upon  to do that.
M Chaplin, Haslemere, Surrey
 
To whom does Bradley Manning owe his allegiance – his fellow citizens or his government? 
If one comes into possession of information that the government is engaged in activities which are unknown to the public and/or against the moral conscience of the majority, where does one’s duty lie? I would suggest clearly to the general public. To do otherwise would be treason indeed.
Madelyne Edwards, Maulden, Bedfordshire
 
Badger cull is based on science
Your report on the letter from a small group of veterinary surgeons regarding bovine TB and the badger cull (5 June) suggests that the signatories are members of our Association and that they accuse BVA of not consulting the membership before taking a position on the badger cull.
In fact only a third of the signatories are BVA members and those that are members have had plenty of opportunity to contribute to our policy on bovine TB, which has been in development for many years. Not every member will have an opinion on every BVA policy, but through our committee system and Council, which includes elected representatives from every region, we are able to give every member a voice.
Like the signatories to the letter we too are absolutely committed to animal health and welfare and, as veterinary surgeons, we believe that effective measures to eradicate endemic disease are an integral part of that commitment. We want to see healthy cattle and healthy badgers and we have been insistent that measures to control bovine TB in wildlife must be humane.
That is why we are supporting the pilot culls. We know that culling badgers reduces the incidence of bovine TB in cattle, but we need to be reassured that the proposed method of controlled shooting is humane, safe and effective. The pilot culls have been designed to be as humane as possible, with trained marksmen and detailed guidance on which types of gun and ammunition may be used, but the methods need to be tested in the field so, as scientists, we have to support the pilots.
Members of our profession are battling daily against bovine TB, working alongside farmers to advise on better biosecurity and carrying out TB tests on cattle. We believe the current policy is science-led and is part of a holistic eradication policy. We support the strong cattle measures in place and the use of badger vaccination, but they are not enough. We are all working towards a cattle vaccine, but that is still many years away.
Our support for the badger cull was not taken lightly but it was taken with the primacy of animal health and welfare and scientific evidence in mind.
Peter Jones, President,  British Veterinary Association,  London W1
 
Gove’s latest bright idea
Your leading article (5 June) applauds moves by Ofqual to transform GCSEs into I-levels and in particular “the decision to spread existing A and A* grades across four numerical marks”.
In reality approximately 15 per cent of candidates each year in each of English and maths get these top grades. So the new system will try to provide greater discrimination for high-achieving candidates, who will be awarded one of four numerical marks while the remaining 85 per cent of candidates will be allocated one of the remaining four marks.
Surely, this will be an inadequate system at providing any meaningful result for the majority of students and for those who use these qualifications to make any judgements about students’ abilities.
This looks like another idea from Mr Gove that will eventually be found to be worthy of a mark outside the top four.
Geoff Wake, Horsley,  Derbyshire
 
Upon reading that Michael Gove’s new I-level certificate will be graded from 1 to 8, to allow 9 and 10 to be added later, it was impossible to avoid recalling the guitarist Nigel Tufnel in the spoof rockumentary This is Spinal Tap.
Tufnel had an amplifier that went up to 11. Presumably when a student finally gets a 10, Gove will heed Nigel’s paraphrased prophetic words:  “It’s an 11. It’s one better isn’t it? Most exam results go up to 10, but when you are at 10, where can you go from there? The I-level goes to 11.”
Michael O’Hare, Northwood,  Middlesex
 
Missing the real scandal
Just as the phone-hacking scandal was not ultimately about a handful of dodgy journalists and  coppers-on-the-make, so the political lobbying scandal is not really about some rogue lobbyists and a few avaricious MPs. Instead both form part of a much wider scandal about how power and influence are exerted within British society.
By focusing narrowly on press regulation, the Leveson inquiry steered well away from any deeper exploration of the dangers corporate power presents to our stuttering democracy. Sadly, attempts to investigate and regulate the lobbyists are certain to have a similarly narrow focus.
Stefan Simanowitz, London NW3
 
Victors’ peace
Dr Jacob Amir states the peace talks are only awaiting the Palestinians to arrive at the table (letter, 4 June). So Israeli Netenyahu sits down with Abbas while he fails to stop the illegal settlements being constructed; and when he has failed to state, unlike his predecessors, that talks would be based on the 1967 borders. It would be suicide for Abbas.
Peter Downey, Bath
 
No surprise
I hope Vaughan Thomas (letter, 4 June) is never the victim of rape. Surprise is not the overriding emotion in such a situation. Terrifying fear, horror, shock, pain and utter humiliation? Yes. Surprise? Mmmm, rather less so.
Alison Rayner, London N16
 
History lesson
Over 40 years ago, one of the questions in my A-level history examination was: “Shrewd, mean and unscrupulous: is this a fair comment on Henry VII?” Is this a fair question to ask our Coalition Government?
Raj Kothari, Bridport, Dorset
 
Mystery mags
I must have visited a newsagent almost every day of my adult life, yet I don’t think I have ever seen anyone buy a “lads’ mag” (letter, 5 June). Perhaps they just fly off the shelf.
David Ridge, London N19
 
Where’s the roof?
The Serpentine Pavilion (report, 5 June) looks delightful – but will it keep the rain out?
Sara Neill, Tunbridge Wells, Kent

Times:

Leaders of the legal Circuits protest at legal aid reforms, while another reader points out the flaws in the current system
Sir, The rights to choose one’s lawyer and to have a fair trial have been tenets of British law for centuries. Yet under proposed cuts to legal aid, the Government will erase 400 years of legal history after a consultation of just 40 days.
The Justice Minister claims these reforms are about cutting legal aid to the wealthiest individuals, but with the right to a lawyer on criminal legal aid capped at just £37,500 joint household disposable income, it will be hard-working families hit hardest yet again. He also claims that this won’t have a negative impact on the criminal justice system, despite protest to the contrary from the Law Society, the Bar Council, the Criminal Bar Association, several senior judges, as well as the leaders of the six legal Circuits all of whom are signatories of this letter.
Those who qualify for legal aid will have their lawyer chosen for them by the state. This lawyer could be from G4S, Serco or Eddie Stobart.
Contracts for criminal cases will be awarded to the lowest bidder. Experienced high street firms of solicitors will fold, and the quality of advice and representation will plummet. Miscarriages of justice and the expense of putting them right in the appeal courts will soar.
Those earning above the income threshold will face the prospect of remortgaging their home, or seeking external finance in order to afford the expert witnesses, forensic specialists and new technology which are part and parcel of modern trials.
Law-abiding citizens may think these changes won’t affect them, but in our experience ordinary families are involved in thousands of cases every year because they defend their homes against a burglar or have a dispute with their neighbour.
We know money needs to be saved, but with bankruptcy of families and miscarriages of justice on the cards, there is little to support in the proposed reforms. We ask the Government to give the legal profession the time and opportunity to develop with it new, more effective reforms which maintain the fairness of the justice system and protect the rights of the ordinary people.
Alistair Macdonald, QC, Leader of the North Eastern Circuit; Sarah Forshaw, QC, Leader of the South Eastern Circuit; Nigel Lickley, QC, Leader of the Western Circuit; Rick Pratt, QC, Leader of the Northern Circuit; Mark Wall, QC, Leader of the Midland Circuit; Greg Bull, QC, Leader, Wales and Chester Circuit
Sir, The suggestion from some of your correspondents that the proposed withdrawal of legal aid in judicial review proceedings will lead to widespread injustice does not stand up to reasoned argument.
Legal aid has contributed to substantial and sustained abuse of the system by those who seek to use the legal process in order to frustrate the legitimate actions of government, particularly in asylum and immigration cases. Most cases fail.
The number of judicial review cases that settle before proceedings is a reflection of the legally aided claimant’s significant and unfair financial advantage. He bears little risk in pursuing the most spurious claim; he is unlikely to have costs awarded against him if his claim fails, while his opponent has to use scarce public resources to fund defended proceedings. It is not unknown for some lawyers to exploit this imbalance.
It is surely wrong that the public should fund individuals who seek to frustrate legitimate and lawful government actions, or to have their lawyers pursue what are effectively political or publicity campaigns on their behalf that ought properly to be aired through the democratic rather than the judicial process.
Legal aid should be granted only in those judicial review cases where a judge is satisfied that the case has a reasonable prospect of success.
James Blair
Winsford, Cheshire

Six QCs representing 10,000 barristers accuse the Justice Secretary today of “wiping away” 400 years of legal history in 40 days.
In a letter to The Times, the six circuit leaders say that the right to choose a lawyer and the right to a fair trial “have been tenets of British law for centuries”. Yet legal aid changes proposed by Chris Grayling would end them, they say.
The QCs warn that the changes will see people accused of crimes having a lawyer “chosen for them by the state”. Appeals and miscarriages of justice will soar, they say.
The letter coincides with the deadline this week for responses to Mr Grayling’s plans to cut £220 million from the legal aid bill.
More than 600 circuit judges as well as the Bar, Law Society and groups such as Catholic Charities and the Children’s Society have all condemned the plans to remove a suspect’s choice of lawyer and to introduce price competitive bidding between lawyers for legal aid contracts.
Yesterday the Bar Council reacted with fury after new figures of top-earning legal aid law firms were leaked to tabloid newspapers. They told Mr Grayling that it would not help him to devise a system of quality standards for barristers which could “wreck the criminal justice system”.
The quality standards are central to the Justice Secretary’s plans to bring in competitive tendering for criminal legal aid.
Michael Turner, QC, chairman of the Criminal Bar, said: “Most criminal members earn less than a plumber.”
He said that Mr Grayling’s plans for introducing quality standards would enable him to abolish a suspect’s choice of lawyer — the time-honoured way of ensuring quality among barristers. “The marketplace has sorted out quality for thousands of years and maintained a profession that is respected worldwide. We are not going to play ball with the Justice Secretary’s agenda.”
A Ministry of Justice spokesman said that it had invited the Bar to work with it on improving its proposals. “It’s disappointing that having had regular discussions with them over the last few weeks, they now seem unwilling to engage on the important issue of ensuring equality.”
On Tuesday hundreds of protesters demonstrated against the plans outside the Ministry of Justice.
In a statement read out to the protest, Michael Mansfield, QC, who has represented the families of Stephen Lawrence and represents families of Hillsborough disaster victims, said: “None of this is primarily about lawyers, although they are affected. It is about a basic provision, justice, the very substance of what is left of our democracy.
“No fundamental rights are worth the paper they are written upon unless they can be enforced, especially against overweening and corruptive authorities.
“There has been, with small exceptions, an intransigence and almost dismissive contempt by government towards the plight of the citizen.”
The demonstration, organised by Save Justice, whose members include Wilson Solicitors LLP, Public Law Project, Liberty and Amnesty International among others, was addressed by a range of speakers including human rights campaigner and Mick Jagger’s ex-wife Bianca Jagger.
Millions of pounds of taxpayers’ money is spent annually supplying lawyers to prisoners who launch “unnecessary” legal claims, the Government said today.
The Ministry of Justice said most of the claims could be handled through a prison service complaints system.
The Association of Prison Lawyers said planned legal aid cuts made “no sense” and warned that confidence in the prison system could be undermined.
“The proposals being put forward make no sense either financially or in terms of public protection,” said an association spokesman. “The removal of public funding will only serve to undermine confidence in the prison system and will inevitably cost the public far more than the current legal aid fees.”

To allow Ministers to extend their own ‘short termism’ to the Civil Service by choosing postholders is ‘a sure-fire recipe for confusion’
Sir, Your report (June 3) that Jonathan Stephens is being pushed out of his Permanent Secretary post on the say-so of the Culture Secretary Maria Miller is perhaps regrettable but hardly surprising.
It can be seen as the latest in a string of enforced departures of civil servants which started after the 1997 general election. In the two years after Tony Blair came to power some two dozen heads of information in the then Government Information Service (GIS) were either removed, bullied and badmouthed, bypassed or otherwise dispensed with.
In evidence to the Commons Public Administration Committee at the time, more than one of us voiced the suspicion that the “mainstream” of the Civil Service stayed silent and let this happen in the belief that ministers, having culled the GIS — and, in many cases, moved in their party placemen and women as replacements — would now call a halt.
They were wrong: while the pace of departures may have slowed, the appetite for what (in a letter to these pages in 1998) I called the “Washingtonisation” of the Civil Service is undiminished, witness — as you report — the success of Michael Gove and Philip Hammond in having their Permanent Secretaries removed. I would not object to any Secretary of State choosing his or her Permanent Secretary or similarly senior figure, provided always the choice was made from among qualified candidates who had passed through the Civil Service selection procedure.
Ministers are, in the main, short-term holders of departmental briefs; to allow them to extend their own “short termism” to the Civil Service by choosing the key post-holders in their departments seems to me to be a sure-fire recipe for confusion, loss of momentum and lack of direction every time there is a change of Minister.
Andy Wood
Director of Information, Northern Ireland Office 1987-97, Holywood, Northern Ireland
Sir, Having served in the Home Office, the Ministry of Defence and the Central Office of Information, it is quite clear to me that the Government, having already destroyed the morale of the Civil Service, is now out to destroy its impartiality.
In the past, experienced senior civil servants have often been able to save ministers of all parties from their own stupidity. If we lose this essential body of knowledge this country will be on a dangerous downward slope.
Barry Richardson
Isham, Northants

The existing policy on drugs in this country costs £3 billion a year and does little to address the causes of addiction
Sir, Worldwide there is growing recognition that the “war on drugs” has failed — having cost billions and caused tens of thousands of deaths.
The Organisation of American States meeting in Guatemala this week is considering a radical rethink of drug policy. In the UK there is growing agreement among scientists, politicians, lawyers and police that we need to review existing policy — which costs £3 billion a year, does little to address the causes of addiction and pointlessly criminalises people.
A Home Affairs Select Committee report being debated in Westminster today warns that the Government can no longer ignore the pressure to consider a new approach and show support for the bold Latin American initiatives to end the drugs war.
The UK Government can start with an independent review of the Misuse of Drugs Act 1971 to examine whether it is effective or good value for money. This would indicate a willingness to acknowledge its failures and to join in the global effort towards an alternative drug strategy.
Caroline Lucas, MP; Sir Richard Branson; Sting; Keith Vaz, MP; Professor David Nutt; Dame Joan Bakewell; Sir Ian Gilmore; Dame Ruth Runciman; Mike Trace; Russell Brand; Zac Goldsmith, MP; Julian Huppert, MP; Paul Flynn, MP; Niamh Eastwood; Danny Kushlick; Lord Rea; Baroness Butler-Sloss; Lord Dholakia; Lord Ramsbotham

Friends of Liberace have been distressed by the film about his life, and knew a different man from that portrayed on screen
Sir, Your piece (June 5) about the Michael Douglas/Liberace film greatly distressed those of us who knew the real Liberace. Michael Douglas’s Liberace is not the man I knew.
The view of Jerry Weintraub, the producer, that Liberace “was tortured by living a lie” is false. I last saw him only a few weeks before he died, and nothing about him suggested a tortured soul. Quite the contrary. In spite of being sick, he was still loved by his audience, and he loved them. And that was all that mattered to him.
Tony Palmer
London

Battersea can be come a major tourist attraction, with some imagination, while preserving the Brick-Cathedral style architecture
Sir, Both Bankside, which houses the Tate Modern, and Battersea power stations were constructed in the Brick-Cathedral style, the latter having an Art Deco interior using Italian marble.
You have to blame my grandfather, William Pearman, for this as he was in charge of the London Power Co in the 1930s.
With imagination Battersea can become a major tourist attraction too, well worth preserving in its entirety even if its “eyes are set too far” apart (letter, June 4).
Christopher Pearman
Oxted, Surrey

Telegraph:

SIR – Chris Barmby (Letters, June 4) is concerned about supermarkets offering best-selling books at knock-down prices while proper booksellers cannot compete.
Not only do supermarkets not stock many items but they will not take special orders as was the tradition with grocers, butchers, greengrocers, hardware shops, newsagents and bookshops. Try to order unusual biscuits, books or trade magazines from a supermarket and one hears the excuse: “We are a supermarket.”
With the closure of so many specialist shops is it time for some regulations to protect the high street or will market forces destroy our shopping culture completely?
Chris Harding
Parkstone, Dorset
SIR – Books are so expensive that those who heavily discount them have great appeal – maybe if the suggested price were £10, rather than £20, those retailers would lose their edge. The independent shops would make a profit – albeit smaller – and have an opportunity to make more sales.
SIR – I spent nine years working for the Metropolitan Police as a crown court liaison officer. During that time I witnessed, on an almost daily basis, the shocking abuse of the legal aid system.
As soon as one dares to question the almost obscene profligacy of the system, lawyers start vehemently complaining. QC after QC explains to all that civilisation is under threat, and that thousands of innocent people will be thrown into jail because the funding has been cut for legally aided lawyers.
This thoroughly wasteful and discredited system needs to be properly reformed, but I hold out no great hope, as too many influential people have their fingers in this very lucrative pie.
P A Feltham
Epsom, Surrey
SIR – Sir Anthony Hooper, a retired appeal court judge, took to the radio yesterday to oppose proposed cuts to the legal aid budget. He described the English system of justice as the “envy of the world”.
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The supermarket’s threat to our specialist shops
05 Jun 2013
As a British taxpayer, I am green with envy of the taxpayers in other countries in Europe and across the world who seem to be able to have perfectly satisfactory justice systems that cost a tiny fraction of that which we “enjoy” in this country.
Ian Goddard
Wickham, Hampshire
SIR – Leading barristers are not the only ones who are concerned by the Lord Chancellor’s proposed changes to legal aid (Letters, May 29).
Proposals to cut the number of criminal legal aid providers from 1,600 to 400, to remove client choice, and to make little or no proper provision for mentally ill defendants prior to conviction have been criticised by senior members of the judiciary, circuit judges and magistrates.
The proposals are fundamentally flawed, and will have a significant, irreversible impact on the criminal justice system.
It is of note that the changes are proposed by a Lord Chancellor who is the first non-lawyer since Tudor times. No lawyers have been consulted about the proposed changes. It is akin to failing to consult doctors or nurses about changes within the NHS.
Far from achieving the much-talked-about but uncosted £220 million in savings, the proposed changes are likely to cost far more in the long run, quite apart from destroying an essential part of the fabric of a civilised society.
His Honour Judge Ticehurst
Taunton, Somerset
SIR – If it is argued that offenders should be allowed their solicitor of choice at public expense then, in this supposedly equal rights society, victims should have the right to a prosecuting barrister of their choice. Under the present system, the defendant has all the rights of choice, while the victims get what they are given.
Linda Bos
Midhurst, West Sussex
Jobs for the children
SIR – James Caan, the new social mobility tsar, suggests that parents should not help their children to get a job (report, June 4). Really? It is every caring parents’ objective to do whatever they can to give their child every advantage in life. To suggest that it would level the playing field, is like asking caring parents not to give their children moral guidance and love so that they can be on the same level as children from disadvantaged backgrounds.
The world is a competitive place and it is naive to think that parents would be willing to dumb down their level of commitment to their children to the lowest common denominator in the interests of social mobility.
If you could package that concept as a commercial venture, I wonder how much support Mr Caan would give it on Dragon’s Den.
Mike Sanders
Midhurst, West Sussex
SIR – When James Caan invests in a business he will do whatever he can to see a return on his capital: not to do so would be foolish – he would not stand idly by for a year watching that company flounder.
Parents make financial (and emotional) investments in their children regardless of whether their offspring went to private schools or not, so they are entitled to do whatever they can to help their progeny get into work as soon as possible.
Robert Warner
West Woodhay, Berkshire
Labour’s cost-cutting
SIR – Ed Balls, the shadow chancellor, can think of no better way to highlight the paucity of the Labour Party’s competence to manage our economy than to choose the withdrawal of the £200-a-year heating allowance from higher-rate taxpaying pensioners (report, June 3).
If this is an example of Labour’s ability to take tough economic decisions, it begins to explain how they got our country into the financial mess it is in.
Paul Harrison
Terling, Essex
SIR – Many charities benefit from the better-off donating their winter fuel allowances to causes that help those in need. I hope that Mr Balls has factored this into his proposal.
John H Stephen
London NW8
Coronation service
SIR – What a delight to watch the Coronation anniversary service from my armchair. I watched the original from just outside Westminster Abbey, and got very wet. I was pleased to understand the address by Justin Welby, the Archbishop of Canterbury – that was a real bonus.
William Rodley
Woking, Surrey
Multiple births
SIR – The picture of Karen Rodger with her twins (“Triple crown mother defies odds to give birth to third set of twins”, report, June 3) prompted me to wonder whether anyone remembers the Cumming quads, born in Aberdeen in the Sixties.
Mrs Cumming had eight children from three pregnancies, twins, twins then quads. All were girls, except for one of the quads. My mother was one of the midwives in the research unit at Aberdeen Maternity Hospital where the quads were born and I have a photograph of her, the research unit sister, Mrs Cumming and all the children, taken when we visited them at their home.
Jenny Jones
Penrith, Cumbria
Lobbying alternative
SIR – Peter Ruck (Letters, June 4) says that businesses have no way to make their voice heard other than through lobbying.
But businesses have offices that lie within parliamentary constituencies. Any sensible MP knows that this means jobs, spending in the local economy and payment of local taxes.
Businesses can talk to their local MP about any issues. I am certainly aware that our own MP is very active in working with the business community, and I am sure that this applies to many, if not most, MPs.
The lobbying scandal is yet another sordid example of how a small group of people have brought shame on our Parliament. It is no wonder that there is such apathy for the democratic process.
John D Harris
Winchester, Hampshire
SIR – I am sure we are all very pleased that Nick Clegg, the Deputy Prime Minister, is to clean up Parliament (report, June 3).
How about starting by removing all the MPs who have criminal records? As with the police, it is a disgrace that we are served by lawmakers and law enforcers who have, or have had, criminal records.
Jonathan Ward
Bungay, Suffolk
Controlling badgers
SIR – It has been clear for a long time that the huge and protected badger population has greatly contributed to the drastic loss of hedgehogs (Letters, June 4). It is also clear that any animal that will tackle a hedgehog will prey on other animals, such as voles, field mice, larks, lapwings, frogs and toads, which are also declining.
In the interests of conserving a broad spectrum of our wildlife, the badger – and anti-cull protesters – must be controlled.
Jeremy Chamberlayne
Gloucester
Hope springs eternal
SIR – While walking the dogs yesterday, the air was full of the aroma of wild garlic, but, for the first time, this was enhanced by the deliciously sweet smell of May blossom – an unexpected benefit of the late spring.
I have always been guided by the saying, “Oak before ash, we’ll have a splash. Ash before oak, we’re in for a soak”. However, in this part of the Forest of Dean the leaves on these trees are emerging not only late, but at the same time. Does this mean that we shall have no rain at all this summer?
Major John Carter
Bream, Gloucestershire
Rising costs and stagnant wages create hunger
SIR – Your leading article (“The politics of food”, May 31) claims that the economy is “stagnant, rather than cratering”, while also acknowledging that food prices are rising fast, as indeed are utilities bills and childcare costs. The truth is that behind the headline GDP figure, many families in Britain today are struggling with rising household costs and stagnant wages.
This is putting pressure on family life and childhoods, and for a very significant few it is causing a rise in severe poverty. Even an economic recovery will take a long time to reach many families. If talking about hunger in Britain is politicising the problem then there is something wrong with our politics, not with those who call attention to it.
Will Higham
UK Director, Save the Children
London EC1
SIR – “The politics of food” should be about opposing government policies that either increase, or fail to reduce, poverty.
Since the Eighties, governments of all colours have failed to introduce policies to provide affordable housing or adequate minimum incomes. Rents or mortgages take up an ever-increasing proportion of incomes, reducing the amount available for food, fuel and other necessities.
So poverty increases, to the extent that many food banks cannot keep up with the demand. Our political leaders are reluctant to tell the electorate about the misery of debt, hunger and homelessness in Britain, to shift the impact of deficit reduction away from the poorest citizens and to spread it more evenly across all taxpayers.
Rev Paul Nicolson
Taxpayers Against Poverty
London N17

Irish Times:

Sir, – Dick Ahlstrom has reminded us of the vicious double whammy penalising Leaving Cert students as they sit their exams in 2013 (Education, June 4th).
The catastrophic effect of the higher math bonus points has undermined the efforts of those students who excel in areas other than maths. This, on top of the cutbacks that diminish the State’s capacity to cater for rising numbers has meant an unprecedented increase in points for most courses.
This is quite simply unfair and increases the cynicism and disillusionment associated with this appalling and out-dated measurement of ability and intelligence. – Yours, etc,
GEOFF SCARGILL,
Loreto Grange,
Bray,

A chara, – Perhaps RTÉ’s Prime Time might produce another excellent programme – on childminders and au pairs – before every parent with their kids in a creche withdraws them thinking the alternatives are problem-free. 
In the case of childminders and au pairs, in many cases there is no proper legal employment agreement between employer and employee, insufficient insurance and no proper training.
This means if problems arise a complete mess can ensue. 
In addition, many parents are obliged to pay PRSI for employing childminders and never do: meaning the childminder has no social welfare rights if he or she is made redundant. That is an abuse of the worker which should be unacceptable in any civilised society. – Is mise,
ALEX STAVELEY,

Sir, – Fintan O’Toole’s revelation (Opinion, June 4th) that a private company called Abtran, which is, “controlled by a secretive Virgin Islands entity” is going to be the contact point for property tax and water tax customers requires further investigation and explanation.
When I lived in the UK I paid rates to the local council, and if there was a problem with the street lights or the state of the road or garbage collection I spoke directly to a council employee.
Here it seems I shall have to speak to an Abtran call centre rather than the correct council department, I say speak, but almost certainly this will become an online function, in other words the paying customer is being pushed further and further away from the people responsible for delivering the service.
My final point is even more disturbing. A small part of my property and water taxes is going to end up in the pocket of a Virgin Islands outfit instead of being used to improve local amenities or repair burst water mains.
What on earth is going on in the corridors of Leinster House? – Yours, etc,
MIKE CORMACK

Sir, – I read with interest David Begg’s article on the need for a new deal for Europe (Opinion, June 5th) and as an active trade unionist I find myself in agreement with him.
What amazes me, however, is Mr Begg’s silence on the recent anti-union Financial Emergency Measure in the Public Interest Bill 2013. Mr Begg and the Irish Congress of Trade Unions have stood by while the Government attempts to bully workers into accepting a deal they have already rejected. Mr Begg has been silent on these measures but has implicitly backed the Government against public service workers with his “we must be realistic speech”. Mr Begg and ICTU are in my opinion an embarrassment to the trade union movement in 2013. – Yours, etc,
BREDA LYNCH,
Sir, – Elaine Byrne (May 6th) asks “What is the difference between politicians looking to the market to solve all their problems and the drug addicts looking for drugs to solve all their problems?”. Easy one; the former are beneficiaries of the Wildean cynicism that knows the price of everything and the value of nothing; the latter its victims, trying to deaden by self-medication the pain it inflicts on those less brazen. See also Dean Swift, A Modest Proposal; as well as Joyce’s Portrait and “. . . the old sow that eats her farrow”.
For those of curious disposition it is suggested they also read up on the 19th-century origins of this problem as a tool of elimination of budget deficits, via Britannia’s Opium Wars to recover her bullion from China while simultaneously de-moralising its people. Britannia rules the brainwaves. – Yours, etc,
DAMIEN FLINTER,
Castleview Estate,

Sir, – I have never met Tom Dunne nor have I read New Managerialism in Education: Commercialization, Carelessness and Gender by Lynch, Grummell and Devine reviewed by Dunne (Weekend Review, June 1st). However, I totally agree with almost everything he writes about third-level education in Ireland. As he quite rightly says “Irish education is being turned into a commodity, designed to suit market forces, rather than a transformative experience for the individual that also has incalculable social – and economic – value”.
The only disagreement I have with Dunne is that unfortunately Trinity College, while maintaining its place in world rankings, is slowly but surely following the managerial model and is in danger of losing its academic and educational values. This would be a tragedy for Ireland and Trinity College. – Yours, etc,
SHAUN McCANN,
Hon FTCD, Prof Emeritus of

Sir, – I was very interested to read Gerald O’Carroll’s account (June 5th) of how the boar came to be adopted into the Earl of Desmond’s coat of arms. But my understanding was that the boar was adopted as sign of the love between Thomas FitzGerald, the Fifth Earl of Desmond and Catherine MacCormac, given it was while hunting boars that Thomas first met Catherine at her father’s house where he received hospitality.
As Catherine was from a Gaelic family their marriage resulted in Thomas losing his title and lands to his uncle as he had violated the Statute of Kilkenny and in 1418 they left for France where Thomas died in 1420 and his funeral was attended by both the King of England and the King of France. – Yours, etc,
DESMOND FitzGERALD,
Canary Wharf,

Irish Independent:
* From a remove of more than three decades it is still possible to summon a cold trickle of sweat down my spine by the mention of two words: Leaving Cert.
Also in this section
The enemy within
You can’t legislate for suicidal thoughts
Media furthers homegrown myth
* From a remove of more than three decades it is still possible to summon a cold trickle of sweat down my spine by the mention of two words: Leaving Cert.
As an indifferent student I managed to construct a “successful” life from the ruins of a very poor examinations performance.
I guess if you poke around in the cinders of disappointment, no matter how poor the results, you’ll always find a spark to ignite something, providing the glowing spirit of no surrender is still there.
I know most of you will sail through no bother, and therefore need only wish you all the very best. But, I came across this the other day – and whether you have a religion or not – it may be of some value to all those slightly stressed souls who will be sitting down today.
Prayers of a student:
Father, I have knowledge, so will you show me how to use it wisely and find a way somehow, to make the world I live in a little better place, and make life with its problems a bit easier to face.
Grant me faith and courage and put purpose in my days, and show me how to serve you in the most effective ways so all my education, my knowledge and my skill, may find their true fulfilment as I learn to do your will.
And may I ever be aware in everything I do, that knowledge comes from learning and wisdom comes from you.
Good luck to you all.
T O’ Brien
Dublin 4
MUMMY KNOWS BEST
* The ‘Prime Time’ programme on creches has evoked much critical reaction and rightly so. Calls for higher standards, more training, increased inspections ignore the elephant in the room. Creches, in my opinion, are not suitable places for children under three.
In the 1930s much research into the effects of maternal deprivation took place. Children in orphanages, foundling homes, psychiatric facilities, hospitals and children who were separated from their families throughout Europe because of war, were studied by many eminent professionals.
The emotional damage caused by early separations from parents was severe in all of these studies.
One psychologist noticed developmental differences between children in foster homes and children in institutions. He placed 13 babies with feebly minded girls from the same institution. Over 19 months the babies’ IQs went from an average of 64 up to 92 such was their emotional need for attachment.
The US National Institute of Child and Health Development studied over 1,000 kids in 10 locations. The UK Effective Provision of Pre-School Education studied 3,000 babies. The Penelope Leach lead group studied over 1,200 babies.
Amongst the studies’ findings, it was revealed that something is given by loving parents in one-to-one care that can’t be substituted. Quality childcare, while important, was not the panacea hoped for as it was stranger-care. The most important finding was that parenting quality and maternal sensitivity had the best outcomes for babies’ emotional wellbeing.
The information and research I have quoted is internationally recognised and accepted.
Babies’ emotional needs must be understood.
Jim Jackman
Park Drive Court, Castleknock, Dublin 15
OUR FAVOURITE WORDS
* High pressure. Never have two words ever meant so much to a whole country.
Kevin Devitte
Mill Street, Westport, Co Mayo
FAR FROM ‘GAWKY’
* I wish to comment on an article written by Vincent Hogan (Irish Independent, June 3).
The article was in relation to Davy Fitzgerald and his Clare hurlers. Mr Hogan referred to our hurlers as “gawky young kids”.
The meaning of gawky is awkward or ungainly. As an avid Clare hurling supporter, I take umbrage with what Mr Hogan called our boys, as far from awkward or ungainly they are.
They are fine specimens of young men, well-built, strong, fit, intelligent and, most importantly, tenacious.
I do admire Mr Hogan’s writings, but on this occasion I think he needs to apologise for his choice of words and, more importantly, search the dictionary when compiling his next article on Davy and his Clare charges.
Clare Corry
Co Clare
ABORTION LEGISLATION
* Martin Delaney (Letters, June 3) opposes the legislation now being proposed that “when there is a risk to a pregnant woman’s life because she is suicidal, action should be taken to remove that which led to her becoming suicidal”. He suggests that this is absurd because the parallel argument that, in cases of debt, nobody has ever argued “that debt should somehow be eliminated in order to save the person’s life”.
There is one significant difference in that the suicide of the mother will lead to the automatic death of the unborn child, whereas an unpaid debt will continue to exist and will simply be charged to the person’s estate.
Martin D Stern
Hanover Gardens, Salford, England
* Abortion is an extremely delicate issue which evokes intense personal feelings on both sides of the argument.
Which is why I found it curious that Anthony O’Leary (Letters, June 3) castigates Micheal Martin for allowing Fianna Fail TDs a free vote on the abortion legislation.
The party whip is a mechanism for ensuring discipline and unanimity within political parties. The whip is imposed to allow a party advance a political agenda and in the case of abortion, forcing TDs to vote a particular way – regardless of how they feel on this very personal issue – is quite cynical.
Fianna Fail has done very little in recent years worthy of admiration, but forgoing political unity to allow human beings vote with their conscience is to be applauded.
Simon O’Connor
Lismore Road, Crumlin, Dublin 12
* Martin Delaney, PP, quite rightly said you can’t legislate for suicidal thoughts.
But you can remove the pressures – social, economic, and emotional – that cause a mother to want an abortion, to feel suicidal even.
Both the church and State have failed continuously in this – making unwed mothers a shame, failing to create legally binding support with co-parenting arrangements, and no one needs to comment on the failures of care for vulnerable children by both parties.
But is he really saying that an abused 14-year-old really has the psychological ability to spend nine months pregnant by her abuser, to endure the major hormone fluctuations that go with pregnancy?
Pauline Bleach
Wolli Creek, NSW, Australia
PARTY LIKE IT’S 1999
* NTMA has, in its wisdom, decided that the interest rates provided by An Post and other state saving organisations would be lowered by up to 40pc. This is to be coupled with a decrease in the winnings provided by the Prize Bond organisation. It says this is to discourage intensive saving by consumers who should party on like it’s 1999, in effect.
What we see here though is another craven capitulation by politicians and the apparatus of the State to the will of the bankers who refuse to match the interest rates provided by An Post etc. We have seen the same interference by banking organisations in the organisational fabric of the Credit Union movement.
Are the people of this country sick of this dictatorship by our banks yet?
Tom Mangan
Ennis, Co Clare
Irish Independent



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7 June 2013 Hair

Off around the park listening to the Navy Lark, oh dear oh dear. Captain Povey’s rank of Captain has not been substantiated. Eve the Pertwee tribe can’t get it done. Desperate he asks the admiral but its been done already Heather distracted with Leslie chasing Amanda the new Wren forgot to pass the news on to him
Priceless.
Another quiet day awfully tired get my hair done and see Joan and do some shopping.
We watch The Pallaisers Old flame is sniffing around, but Dull but Worthy Hubby;s sidekick intervenes in time
Mary wins at scrabble but gets under 400 perhaps I can have my revenge tomorrow.

Obituary:

Tom Sharpe
Tom Sharpe, the comic novelist, who has died aged 85, combined a rich, ribald imagination and farcical plotting to portray a view of late 20th-century Britain that could swing from scorn to nostalgia.

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Tom Sharpe Photo: MARTIN POPE
5:36PM BST 06 Jun 2013
He reliably created situations that were visual and unforgettable. In Sharpe’s books, inflatable women paralyse a city; ostriches force-fed with gelignite hover over Natal; and bull-terriers high on LSD roam Croydon. As the handgun was a crucial motif to Raymond Chandler, and the billet doux to Barbara Cartland, so whole Sharpe narratives could depend on condoms: in Porterhouse Blue, an earnest Cambridge postgraduate makes love to his plump bedder while the college tower swells portentously with methane-filled prophylactics.
Sharpe was an admirer of PG Wodehouse and Evelyn Waugh. He inherited the latter’s instinct for angry satire: strident women, corrupt policemen, progressive academics, publishers, misuse of the English language, dogs and Americans were among the butts of his ire. He eschewed the gentle ironies of the English comic novel in favour of shameless vulgarity, and so won a wide readership.
But those who met him were often surprised to discover a donnish, well-spoken man who was keen on roses and collected antique typewriters.
Thomas Ridley Sharpe was born on March 30 1928 in Holloway, north London, and brought up in Croydon. His father, the Rev George Coverdale Sharpe, was a Unitarian minister whose world view was broad by ecclesiastical standards: he was an ardent admirer of Adolf Hitler and a friend of William Joyce, “Lord Haw-Haw”. The family was frequently required to move house at short notice to flee the threat of internment. The young Tom Sharpe assimilated these views, and took them to school with him.
Forty years later his recollections of this period made for a disturbing edition of Dr Anthony Clare’s In the Psychiatrist’s Chair on Radio 4: “It seems completely mad to me now,” Sharpe said. “I wore a German belt. But my father never lived to see the death camps. He died in 1944 with all his Platonic ideals intact. I was the one who lived to see the film of Buchenwald and Belsen. It was appalling.”
He went to Lancing, where the vast chapel had a strange effect on him. Forever afterwards Sharpe felt unease in church, or in any other situation where there was a crowd standing in silence. At such moments he would be subject to panic, dizziness and an irrational fear (never realised) that he might begin screaming obscenities. He went on to Pembroke College, Cambridge, where he studied Archaeology and Anthropology. His final long essay, however, argued “violently” against social anthropology as a science, and he graduated with a Third.
After National Service in the Marines, in 1951 Sharpe left for South Africa, where he did social work for the non-European affairs department and taught in Natal. By 1957 he was established as a professional photographer with his own studio in Pietermaritzburg. Sharpe, who was appalled by the apartheid system, was deported in 1961, following the staging of his play The South African. On his return to England, he accepted a post as a lecturer in History at the Cambridge College of Arts and Technology.
In 1971, aged 43, he left the college to become a full-time novelist. His curriculum vitae provided him with his first targets. Riotous Assembly (1971) and Indecent Exposure (1973) attacked the policy of racial segregation. South Africa, Sharpe recalled, “was easy to write about because it was a mad society. I was living out there and I knew. It was just mind-blowing to any fair-minded person. By God there was a lot of venom in those books. When I got back to England I was able to reinvent South Africa in my own mind and write about the country in a screwball way.” He depicted policemen going through an intimate form of aversion therapy to prevent them from finding black women attractive; the books were banned in South Africa.
His third novel, Porterhouse Blue (1975), was an anarchic sexual farce set in a Cambridge college; the title referred to the type of disabling stroke, brought about by overindulgence, to which its fellows were prone. Porterhouse was guarded by Skullion, an irascible porter, memorably played by David Jason in the 1987 television adaptation. (Skullion was thought by some to have been modelled on Albert Jaggard, head porter at Corpus Christi.)
Sharpe summoned up his past as a lecturer to create the character Wilt, a polytechnic lecturer in Liberal Studies, whose daytime occupation — teaching bored butchers and fitters on day release courses — offered limited scope for furthering his real interests, which included extramarital intercourse and planning the acceleration of his wife’s demise. The author afflicted Wilt with increasingly random disasters throughout five books: Wilt (1976), The Wilt Alternative (1979), Wilt on High (1984) and Wilt in Nowhere (2004). The last of the series, The Wilt Inheritance, was published in 2010.
He believed that his books could be divided into two categories: those written with a conscious effort, and those where inspiration arrived apparently unbidden. “I feel that Wilt and Riotous Assembly were the ones which really ran away,” he said. “I really can’t claim that I wrote them. You hang on to the tail of it when it’s running.” In the early stages of his career, Sharpe seemed to be able to produce bestsellers at will: Riotous Assembly took him three weeks to write. Tom Rosenthal, of Secker, said: “We are hoping for a Sharpe a year till the crack of doom.”
Gradually, however, there were signs that his apparently boundless creativity was abating. For all its ingenious plotting, The Throwback (1978) developed a lurid strain that delighted some fans while alienating others. “If getting a taxidermist to stuff your grandfather and blowing up a neighbour’s house by pumping gas up his lavatory pan are your taste in jokes, then Mr Sharpe is your man,” remarked The Sunday Telegraph. “If not, not.”
Before settling in southern Spain in 1995, Sharpe lived at Great Shelford, near Cambridge, where he cared for his garden. In 1987 he donated £25,000 to help launch an appeal for research funds by the Cambridge Trust for Science and Technology; he was an active participant in PEN, the international congress dedicated to defending writers and freedom of expression, and frequently travelled to the many countries in which his work was appreciated. On one occasion he had a heart attack live on Spanish television, and would offer to show visitors the tape.
For the decade until 1995 he published nothing, in spite of his daily efforts in his garden shed, and explained that Britain was “too serious to be funny”. But then he produced Grantchester Grind, a sequel to Porterhouse Blue. The feat was all the more amazing since, in the earlier novel, he had killed the Master, paralysed the porter and destroyed most of the college.
He followed this with The Midden (1996), a characteristic romp around a country house, and the fourth Wilt novel. The two books have similar plots, but in The Midden the police are corrupt, and in Wilt in Nowhere helpful. There, Sharpe saved his mockery for the NHS.
That book showed some indications that he could master his rage and settle for a more resigned, even tragic attitude towards the world. He had Flint, a policeman often pitted against Wilt, reflect of a recent calamity: “Tripping on the gravel and then being trampled over by a herd of maddened lunatics had given him fresh insight into Wilt’s inconsequential view of life. Things just happened to people for no good reason and, while Flint had previously believed that every effect had to have had a rational cause, he now realised that the purely accidental was the norm. In short, nothing made sense. The world was as mad as the inmates of the hospital he had just left.”
The Gropes (2009), his first departure from the Wilt series in over a decade, came after a long period of enforced inactivity due to ill health. Indeed, the book was dedicated to “the doctors who saved my life in 2006”. In the final years of his life he had also been working on an autobiography.
He was awarded the 13th Grand Prix de l’Humour Noir Xavier Forneret in 1986 and the inaugural BBK La Risa de Bilbao Prize in 2010.
Tom Sharpe married, in 1969, Nancy Anne Looper, with whom he had two daughters.
Tom Sharpe, born March 30 1928, died June 6 2013

Guardian:

I believe the vote in the House of Lords on same-sex marriage was one of the most momentous in the long story of the struggle for equality (Report, 5 June). The opponents mustered all their forces in the forum that they saw as the most sympathetic to their views and were defeated by an even wider margin than in the House of Commons. No longer can they maintain that they have been denied the opportunity to advance their arguments, nor that they have only been defeated by devious political manoeuvering.
Pressure should now be on the Church of England, and particularly the House of Bishops, to act quickly on the statement in Archbishop Welby’s speech that it is time for some genuine atonement for the hurt done to gay people over so many years. In particular it must start to speak out more clearly against the active persecution of LGBT communities in other parts of the world, often aided and abetted by churches belonging to the Anglican communion. If instead the church here prefers to spend its time trying to concoct objections to gay marriage, it will simply be seen to be allying itself to the most hopelessly reactionary and outdated attitudes the have been decisively rejected by majority opinion in the country.
Nicholas Billingham
London
• Opposing same-sex marriage is an attempt to deny a large part of society equal legal rights to a key social institution. In this respect, Nicholas Holtam is absolutely right to equate such opposition to apartheid. In legal terms, it is hard to see how failing to make same-sex marriage legal is not discriminatory, and the reforms currently proposed by government are needed to ensure the UK removes entrenched discrimination from its legal and social system.
Just as apartheid is now seen universally as anachronistic and repellent, those opposing same-sex marriage will one day be considered Luddites. Governments must not shy away from attacking discriminatory practices in every part of society.
Regardless of sexuality, people should be able to choose whether or not they marry. Until this is backed up by legislation, the discriminatory practices of religious institutions will continue to contradict Britain’s aspirations to openness and inclusivity.
Jonathan West
Head of family and matrimonial law at Prolegal, London
• Liberal Jews believe that all people were created in the image of God. Life has many challenges and love is the one warm harbour we can all hope to be anchored in. As a rabbi I am delighted with the peers’ vote yesterday on equal marriage and am looking forward to celebrating the first fully Jewish and fully legal same-sex marriage under a Liberal Jewish marriage canopy.
Rabbi Aaron Goldstein
Liberal Judaism
• Is the Ann Widdecombe who denies being authoritarian and says the state has no business regulating what people do in their bedrooms (Strictly speaking, G2, 6 June) related to the Ann Widdecombe who in 1994 voted against a reduction in the gay age of consent, thereby fighting for the right to throw 20-year-old men into prison for consensual sex in the privacy of their own bedrooms?
Tony Bird

Britain’s 14 overseas territories are very small and often relatively isolated places, with a combined population of only around 260,000, equivalent to that of Southend-on-Sea (Cameron calls in the tax havens, 5 June). Tourism and financial services are typically the two principal – and often the only – sources of income. These jurisdictions, unlike the rich, diversified economies of G8 countries, face the economic necessity of offering a low tax environment in order to attract business.
Equally significant is that fact that UK offshore financial centres, such as Jersey and Guernsey, provide an important though largely invisible boost to London’s financial services industry. Most of the offshore assets in these centres are managed by firms in London. Ironically, unlike mostly overtaxed and inefficient G8 countries, these offshore jurisdictions are typically better regulated and extremely efficient, because they have to attract business. Moreover, contrary to inaccurate populist media coverage, only a small proportion of the assets held in these islands are from illegal tax evasion. The majority results from real, legitimate, tax-compliant business.
Finally, most of the G8 countries have not themselves adopted the same levels of transparency they are demanding of these so-called tax havens. There can be no question that transparency is a good thing. However, David Cameron has a unique opportunity to demonstrate leadership by ensuring that fellow G8 members practice what they preach.
James Anderson
Geneva, Switzerland
• The precise constitutional relationship between the UK and the overseas territories may be a matter of dispute, but what is indisputable is that the UK is guaranteeing the banks in these tax havens. Jersey et al rely on the security of the very country whose tax take they are reducing. All Cameron has to do to is withdraw this support and no one will risk using banks based there.
Philip Cunningham
London

Simon Jenkins is right that in order for money to start circulating in an economy starved of liquidity, it’s the people that should receive the cash from the government, not the banks (Balls is as mesmerised by the bankers as Osborne, 5 June). But it’s not about a massive one-off handout, it’s about long-term measures such as better wages and pensions. Government should pump money into schools, hospitals and housing. Strong regulation and big government is needed to claw back the money owed by big business. In other words, good old-fashioned socialism. But of course, being an establishment figure, he won’t dare use that word. He tries to exonerate Thatcher, but it was her wholesale privatisation and deregulation of the city that got us into this mess in the first place.
Andy Hall
London
• Simon Jenkins’s lucid exposé of Ed Balls’s adherence to austerity economics also serves to remind us of the corporate capture of our democracy. Ever since the introduction of universal suffrage the ultra-rich and their corporations have spent billions on propaganda, seeking to impose their interests on public policy. The aim has always been to undermine democracy by ensuring mainstream political parties surrender to corporate interests. Balls’s capitulation to Tory economic philosophy seems to finalise this. Now that voting has been rendered pointless, it seems to me our focus must be on changing the economic and political system.
Enrico Tortolano
Kingston upon Thames, Surrey
• Simon Jenkins is right to criticise Ed Balls for his speech on Monday; but it is the Labour leadership who should come under scrutiny. Heeding the polls, and made timid by Tory taunts, they seem to have decided that any effort to put the Keynesian case to the British public will be doomed to failure.
But Simon hasn’t got his doctor analogy quite right. A more correct comparison can be made by likening the austerity policies now strangling the European economies to a medieval quack bleeding a patient with a fever. The result in both cases may be terminal.
Brian Fullaway
Winchester, Hampshire
• Simon Jenkins calls for quantitative easing to be extended to citizens rather than corporations. I suggest a little tweaking: issue a series of time-limited vouchers rather than money, to avoid hoarding and stimulate circulation, and stipulate that they can only be spent on UK-manufactured goods to guarantee employment. Given enough cash, I’d spend mine on a Moulton bicycle, a decent suit and a stack of records from Britain’s excellent indie labels.
Dr Aidan Byrne
Wolverhampton
• Polly Toynbee writes that “[the] Labour party needs a grander vision for re-ordering a deeply disordered status quo” (No big idea. But Labour’s iron man could do the trick, 4 June). If you want to rescue the damsel, first you have the slay the dragon. Britain has to accept that financial services don’t generate wealth, they redistribute wealth. On the pretension that we are all going to be wealthy tomorrow, we are encouraged to spend everything today. Financial services work by the creation of a debt no one wants to repay. Pensions were sold on the understanding that contributors would receive a pension they could live on. The dream lasted until contributors needed to spend their pensions.
Banks work by transferring wealth from the existing creative force to the upcoming creative force. But since the 70s banks have been transferring wealth from Britain to developing economies. The only source of wealth is creativity and saving. We have to start making more stuff and wasting less of everything. Balls needs to find a phrase that expresses this necessity. He also has to find the words to persuade the electorate that Britain has a future we all need to work for. The alternative is a plethora of single-issue politicians who argue that doing something different constitutes progress.
Martin London
Henllan, Denbighshire
• Ed Balls’s much-trailed announcement that he would cap the winter fuel allowance made me wince with embarrassment. Is this going to rally the faithful? Is it going to hurt the rich? Not a chance. The best thing Ed Miliband can do is get rid of Ed Balls. He is tainted with the last disastrous Labour administration that faithfully followed Thatcher’s market-driven philosophy.
If the Labour party wants to appeal to the grassroots, it needs to give us some policies that we can feel proud to support. Slapping the rich across the face with a wet fish does nothing for me.
Dr Mark Wilcox
Holmfirth, West Yorkshire
• The rise of Ukip is related to the austerity that working-class people are suffering (Report, 31 May). It is no good blaming racism and xenophobia on the morals of white working-class people who have been ignored by the mainstream political parties and let down in terms of education, health, housing and so on. Under Tony Blair’s leadership, the working class was abandoned by Labour, and Ukip are exploiting that. Labour must use its policy review process to include policies in its next manifesto that will win back its core working-class support. Labour nationally should emulate what the party has done in Islington in London, with a fairness agenda that tackles inequality by paying workers the living wage and generally looking after the interests of the least well-off. That is why Labour is on the rise electorally in Islington. Labour should try it nationally.
Gary Heather
London
• Instead of wasting time aping the government, why doesn’t Labour simply rebrand as “New Tory”?
Simon Platman
London

In publicising his forthcoming book on Winston Churchill (The maverick, charismatic Tory – Boris Johnson, 5 June), Boris Johnson states that his hero provides “the resounding human rebuttal to all Marxist historians who think history is the story of vast and impersonal economic forces”. In his 18th Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte, Karl Marx wrote: “Men make their own history, but they do not make it as they please; they do not make it under self-selected circumstances, but under circumstances existing already, given and transmitted from the past.” I would have thought that this fits Churchill perfectly.
David Hardiman
University of Warwick
• Even more vexing than Susan Loppert’s standing ovation (Letters, 5 June) is the obligation to happy-clap along with a musical accompaniment to the curtain call, thereby distributing equal applause to each cast member – since when was theatre supposed to be democratic? – and, the while, remarking that quite a small proportion of the public can manage to clap on the beat.
W Stephen Gilbert
Corsham, Wiltshire
• Not sure about other readers, but Archicebus achilles looks a bit swivel-eyed to me. Maybe we haven’t all evolved (Report, 6 June).
David Reed
London
• Do we just mock the lack of spaces in those endless German compounds (So long, say the Germans as biggest word becomes history, 4 June)? English seems no different when it offers instructions such as this from a Range Rover manual: Release the floor console stowage compartment lid hinge pin RH sleeve clips.
Andreas Klatt
Shipston-on-Stour, Warwickshire
• Who better to investigate whether the British Lions have started biting the opposition than a citing officer called Freek Burger (Report, Sport, 6 June)?
Alan Woodley
Northampton
• Do prisoners do anything other than languish in jail (Letters, 6 June)?
Fr Julian Dunn
Great Haseley, Oxfordshire

While it was good to see John Dugdale’s discussion of the Barbara Pym centenary (The week in books, 1 June ), it did give an impression of the writer as cosy and middlebrow, ending as it did with reference to a “Barbara Pym tea-bag rest”. Like Jane Austen, Pym sometimes needs rescuing from her fans. As critics have shown, Pym’s gifts include dispassionate irony, absurd humour, the depiction of London as a place of endless eccentricity, and a humanistic concern for the lives of the lonely. It has been suggested that she be compared to Evelyn Waugh and Anthony Powell, who are far more appropriate than Miss Marple. At our Barbara Pym centenary conference at the University of Central Lancashire next month, international speakers will give papers on Pym’s depiction of homosexuality, the cultural climate of the 1970s, and on textual links with TS Eliot, Philip Larkin, modernism and realism. There is far more to Barbara Pym than stories about jumble sales and clergymen.
Dr Nick Turner
University of Central Lancashire

Independent:
Contrary to your article “Plan to make the UK’s electricity supply green is defeated in the Commons” (5 June), the Energy Bill will make the UK’s electricity supply green.
Clean energy investors should take huge confidence from the overwhelming majority of MPs – 396 in favour, eight against – who voted on Tuesday to complete the Commons passage of the Energy Bill. Cross-party consensus behind our reforms to the electricity market is strong.
The Bill will provide the certainty investors need. Long-term contracts for low-carbon will enable renewables, nuclear and carbon capture and storage to compete against conventional power stations, and they will be backed by our tripling in support for clean energy by 2020.
There are clearly differing views on setting a 2030 decarbonisation target for the power sector. There is logic to legislating now to enable us to set a target range in 2016, once we’ve decided the economy-wide emission reductions that will have to be achieved by 2030, so I am pleased that the House chose to support that position.
In any case, we’re already bound by law to cut emissions across the whole UK economy by 50 per cent by 2025, and the Energy Bill will bring about substantial decarbonisation of the power sector as part of that.
Crucially, it will also help us keep the lights on and people’s bills down.
Edward Davey, Secretary of State, Department of Energy and Climate Change, London SW1
Although a proposal to decarbonise the UK’s power sector was narrowly defeated in the House of Commons, this crucial issue is far from over.
Many of the UK’s top businesses are calling for a target for cleaning up our energy system, because it would give them the confidence to invest in Britain’s huge renewable energy resources, creating thousands of new jobs and business opportunities.  It would also wean the nation off increasingly costly fossil fuels and ensure the UK played a leading role in tackling climate change.
The House of Lords is due to discuss the Energy Bill later this month. Peers must put the interests of households, the economy and environment first and vote for clean energy.
Andy Atkins, Executive Director, Friends of the Earth, London N1
The direction of current government energy policy is quite clear. The Energy Bill going through Parliament has been stripped of obligations to meet hard carbon-emission targets, wind farms will soon be almost impossible in rural areas, wasting wind resources and losing income to enterprising farmers, and a harsh EU solar trade control on cheaper Chinese solar energy equipment also has the effect of shoving up renewable prices.
This will all have the desirable political effect (from the point of view of mending Cameron’s fences with the disaffected red faces on his back benches) of annoying Liberal Democrats and Greens. But it also (further) rigs the accounting rules of energy policy in favour of shale gas and nuclear energy.
Should we wonder, in the light of The Independent’s excellent attempts to expose the range of corporate lobbying, what negotiations behind the scenes were involved? But at least this fiasco reminds one how far from neutral, and how highly politicised, are all the accounting rules around energy policy, claimed energy reserves and energy prices.
Dr Chris Farrands, Nottingham
Battles rage over the middle lane
Driving while using a phone, tailgating and not wearing a seatbelt are all habits which pose a clear risk to other road users and should be punished effectively. Driving in the middle lane of a motorway, however, not only poses no danger to others, but is something we should all do as standard (“Highway safety drive – or just the latest ministerial car crash?”, 6 June).
The safest place for drivers who are moving steadily at moderate speed, near the speed limit, is the middle lane. Your vehicle is not in the way of cars that want to pass you, who can use the right lane, and not in the way of vehicles entering and exiting the motorway, who need the left lane. Vehicles merging on to the motorway from slip roads need large gaps to come up to motorway speed safely, and should be left in possession of the left lane as much as possible. This would also greatly reduce danger for anyone forced to stop on the verge with car trouble.
Left lane for coming on and off, centre lane for cruising, and right lane for passing. Surely that is perfectly simple, clear and safe?
Ellen Purton, Twickenham, Middlesex
If the police are to begin issuing tickets to so-called “middle lane hoggers”, how will such a category be defined? Where there is a lot of traffic in the nearside lane moving at 60mph and less, I frequently drive at 70mph in the middle lane. It seems to incur the displeasure of many motorists, who flash their lights behind me.
But my attitude is that if they must insist on breaking the law, then there is a perfectly good outside lane which they can use for the purpose. Many of those who complain ad nauseam about middle-lane users, in reality have an expectation of there being not one but two lanes in which they have an entitlement to exceed the speed limit.
Chris Sexton, Crowthorne, Berkshire
One of the more dangerous situations caused by motorway middle-lane hogging is where one heavy lorry tries to overtake a second at a very low speed differential. Sometimes this takes several miles, during which time all faster traffic is limited to the single outside lane.
This causes very long queues of traffic to build up in the outside lane, often travelling too close together. That means that slightly slower light-weight traffic either has to travel at the slow speed of the heavy lorries or attempt to push into the already busy outside lane in order to make progress. These lane changing manoeuvres can easily be misjudged, leading to the potential for accidents.
Frank Shackleton, Rochdale, Lancashire
 Middle-lane hogs are indeed a nuisance, but a far greater menace are slow-lane snoozers – drivers of lorries in the slow lane who are oblivious to what is happening around them, and who stubbornly refuse to slow down to allow overtaking lorries to pass quickly.
The result? Long tail-backs in the fast lane of dual carriageways. The wise solution here is not to encourage the overtaking lorry to drive faster, but for the lorry being overtaken to slow down, just a little bit – or be fined.
Dennis Sherwood, Exton, Rutland
Reducing the risk of rape
In the recent correspondence about rape there seems to be a gender divide, which I’d like to redress.
The men don’t appear to me to be suggesting that rape is other than a heinous crime; they merely point out that women can take steps to reduce their risk. I agree.
Anyone is entitled to dress as they please. But if someone deliberately sets out to become incapably drunk (as some do) they are increasing the likelihood that ill will befall them, either criminally or accidentally. Whether they are raped, robbed or hit by a bus, they will be understandably shocked. But they are not entitled to be surprised.
There may be satisfaction to be derived from merely apportioning blame, but it is more constructive to consider how potential victims can make themselves safer. Saying that young women do not owe themselves a duty of care is demeaning to them and  increases the chance of their coming to harm.
Susan Alexander, Frampton Cotterell, South Gloucestershire
Mystery spending on free schools
If, as is expected, the education budget is cut by £1bn in the next spending review, then one would think that the level of spending on free schools and academies would be of particular interest to parents and the public.
Not so, according to the DfE, as Mr Gove’s department has consistently refused to divulge the spending in these areas, citing that the “balance of public interest falls in favour of the maintenance of an exemption in relation to the information relating to this particular request”.
I first asked for this information in February. One wonders why the full financial implications of these policies have still to be revealed.
Simon G Gosden, Rayleigh, Essex
Government by celebrities
If you’re the new social mobility tsar, James Caan, picked by the Government to promote opportunities for less affluent young people, don’t go on the record telling parents not to help their kids with jobs after giving your daughters top roles in your investment company and on the board of your foundation (report, 5 June).
I don’t know who has the least amount of common sense: Caan for such double standards or Nick Clegg for appointing someone without researching the facts. Isn’t it time for the Government to reduce its reliance on self-promoting celebrities?
Daniel Todaro, Newbury, Berkshire
Fair warning
Reading Steve Richards’ report on the Labour Party’s policy contortions on public expenditure (6 June), I could not help concluding that the Labour leadership is getting its betrayal in first. Again. So much for the rhetoric about “savage” Coalition cuts. At least voters will know where the party stands on polling day. Next time, we will be prepared for disappointment with a Labour government from day one.
Paul Wilder, London SE11
Secret shame
David Ridge states that he has never seen anyone buy a “lads’ mag” in his daily visits to his newsagents (Letters, 6 June). That is because buyers smuggle such unedifying publications to the counter inside other journals. Similarly, in post-Hillsborough Liverpool, the ashamed few who still purchase The Sun newspaper do so by hiding their copy of Mr Murdoch’s masterpiece inside Naked Over 40s or the like.
Colin Burke, Manchester
Not for eating
It is irresponsible of Mark Hix (1 June), to suggest catching freshwater crayfish from a local river or stream, when the native white clawed crayfish is an endangered species, and it is illegal to catch or handle them without a licence from Natural England.
Steve Bartlett, Addlestone, Surrey
Get a new slogan
Advice to Tory PR office: two mantras have lost their impact and should be downgraded to hackneyed. They are “The mess we inherited” and “Hard-working people”.

Times:

The problems of retaining care for the local populace, ‘grossly overcrowded’ hospitals, and reconfiguring care for the community
Sir, I am a hospital governor of a trust that wishes to merge with another to save money and make the service more efficient. I understand the costs of the application are more than £6 million and rising due in part to the application having to be considered by the Competition Commission. If your headline is to be believed (“Hospitals must close to save NHS, say chiefs”, June 5) it might be cheaper to close one hospital altogether rather than attempt to improve the system. That would save the Competition Commission a job, at the price of reducing care for the local populace.
Brian V. Newman
Bournemouth
Sir, Hundreds of thousands of NHS patients are waiting up to a year or more for hospital appointments and admissions, the treatment of emergency cases is being dangerously and sometimes fatally delayed due to lack of hospital beds, wards are so grossly overcrowded that some patients have been dying of neglect, starvation and dehydration, infectious cases have been unable to be isolated and hospital infections are rife. To close more hospitals to save the NHS amounts to killing the patient to preserve the disease.
Dr Max Gammon
London SE16
Sir, Alice Thomson is right to point out the futility of blaming A&E waiting times on GPs (“How to fix your A&E emergency, Mr Hunt”, June 5). However, to argue that closing hospitals and A&Es will lead to the collapse of the NHS is not only incorrect, it is the worst possible conclusion to draw from the difficulties facing emergency care providers.
The only way the NHS is likely to be made sustainable is through significant, clinically-led reconfiguration of hospital-based care. This requires courageous leadership and difficult decisions that are often opposed by local people. The assertion that no more A&E departments should close in response to the pressure on services will only further undermine this vital work, which seeks to strengthen community-based care and improve the NHS offering away from the emergency room.
Sam Burrows
London SW1
Sir, First, one of the problems causing A&E blockages is the lack of beds in hospitals. Premature hospital closure would merely exacerbate the problem. For the plan to work, new facilities need to be built in the community and healthcare and social care budgets aligned. This would require initial infrastructure funding, although not via Private Finance Initiative schemes, as these are the cause of the current problems, tying up revenue schemes which prevent short-term reconfigurations of healthcare provision. In the present financial austerity such infrastructure funding seems unlikely to happen.
Second, while separate units can provide hip replacements, orthopaedic surgeons are needed in A&E to tend to trauma patients and therefore need to be multi-skilled rather than one-trick ponies.
Unfortunately, with an ageing population and a subsequent rise in chronic conditions, together with increasing healthcare expectations, more money needs to be spent on healthcare provision. The proposed approach of cutting one service (hospitals) to provide another is a failing strategy.
Tim Thomas
Langstone, Hants

The BBC Trust sought further information and took action as early as the summer of 2012 on the problematic Digital Media Initiative
Sir, You report that the BBC Trust was told in May 2012 that there were problems with the recently abandoned Digital Media Initiative and failed to act on this warning. This is not correct (“Whistleblower told Patten BBC digital project was doomed”, June 5).
The warning letter, along with other sources of information, prompted the Trust to seek further information from the BBC Executive through the summer of 2012. By the autumn the Trust had requested a new business case based on a fundamental review and agreed that in the meantime spending in most areas should be temporarily halted. On the basis of this review, we agreed to the BBC Executive’s proposal last month that a permanent halt should be called to the DMI project. The Trust is extremely concerned about the way the project was managed and reported to us, and we have commissioned an external review by PwC into what went wrong, the results of which will be published.
Anthony Fry
BBC Trustee, London W1

It will be a few years yet before we can say for certain whether internet dating has truly led to ‘longer, happier’ marriages
Sir, You suggest (Times2, June 6) that internet dating has led to “longer, happier” marriages. Since internet dating began not much more than a decade ago how can you know this?
My own marriage is now 45 years old, and I am far from unique. Surely you cannot make such a statement until another century has elapsed and the duration of my generation’s marriages and the duration of “internet” marriages can be compared.
Peter Wallwork
Eccleston, Lancs

An Austrian named Baron Eugen von Ransonnet-Villez made sketches under water in the Red Sea and Ceylon as early as 1867
Sir, Your correspondent is correct that Robert Gibbings made drawings under water (letter, June 4), but he was not the first. Baron Eugen von Ransonnet-Villez, an Austrian, made sketches under water of corals in the Red Sea, and also in Ceylon where he had a diving bell made. These sketches were published as coloured lithographs in a fine quarto volume entitled “Sketches of the inhabitants, animal life and vegetation in the lowlands and high mountains of Ceylon, as well as of the submarine scenery near the coast, taken in a diving bell” (Vienna, 1867).
Nigel Phillips
Chilbolton, Hants

Vodafone invests significant amounts of money both in spectrum and in the creation of its network, and holds its performance up for scrutiny
Sir, I must take issue with your report “Vodafone drops to back of the queue as Londoners wait for better signal” (June 4). The article relies on research by RootMetrics, a company new to the UK market and which does not share its full methodology. While its algorithm remains a mystery to all who read its reports, what is crystal clear is that like is not compared with like.
For instance, different phones were used to test different operators, and 2G/3G services for some operators were compared directly with the 4G service of another. Also, while your headline referred to “Londoners”, the RootMetrics research, as your article made clear, relates to a wider area including Saffron Walden and Tunbridge Wells.
Vodafone invests significant amounts of money both in spectrum and in the creation of our network, and gladly holds its performance up for transparent and rigorous scrutiny. That’s why our performance is tested, alongside that of many of the world’s other largest mobile networks, by P3.
This independent, respected German company published its most recent findings barely a month ago. Those findings contradict many of those you have taken from RootMetrics.
Guy Laurence
CEO, Vodafone UK

Telegraph:
SIR – Perhaps the residents of Breadsall, Derbyshire (“Villagers spitting feathers over mischievous peacock”, report, June 4) could have a word with Kevin and tell him about Henny-Penny, who turned up last year and is a lonely peahen.
She roosts in a tree, has breakfast and tea with our hens, loves spaghetti and white bread and spends hours looking at herself in the windows.
Camilla Borradaile
Blandford Forum, Dorset
SIR – The good folk of Breadsall are being rather sensitive towards the presence of Kevin the peacock.
Up here, we have an ostentation of peacocks in the park who saunter around the town, looking in shop windows, inspecting gardens and even crossing a busy main road. It’s an impressive sight to see a large articulated truck giving way to this most beautiful of birds.

SIR – Philip Johnston’s article on Wimbledon Magistrates’ Court (Comment, June 5) awakened sad memories of my own experience, over five years ago, when I’d considered applying to be a magistrate.
One of the requirements before confirming my offer was for me to spend two full days in court, observing proceedings from the public gallery. Those two days convinced me that the system was an organisational near-disaster with less than half of the cases scheduled to be heard starting.
There were missing papers, missing witnesses, missing legal representatives and, in two cases, missing accused. At the end, I asked the clerk whether the two days I’d observed were representative: she gave a weary assent. I did not proceed with my candidacy.
It seemed that some simple parts of the process were not being carried out properly, and there was an absence of sanctions against those who failed.
Those who volunteer as magistrates, and continue to sit despite the chaos around them, fully deserve our admiration. They give their time for free.
Related Articles
The mischievous antics of sociable peacocks
06 Jun 2013
Michael Nidd
Hemel Hempstead, Hertfordshire
SIR – I recall attending Wimbledon Magistrates Court in 1972 as a witness.
One morning, I was walking along, when I heard an almighty bang behind me. I looked around, and saw a motorcyclist lying in the road, and a small car travelling in the opposite direction. I noted the registration number of the car, and advised the police, to whom I gave a statement.
Some days later, I was asked to attend the court, where the police prosecuted the driver of the car. I was called as a witness, and duly gave my evidence, which was not questioned. The accused was fined, had to pay court costs, and was given a five-year disqualification.
It was all over in 20 minutes.
Valentine Ramsey
Sherborne, Dorset
SIR – The latest move by the Government to reduce legal aid costs, although admirable, is unlikely to succeed if the record of the Ministry of Justice is anything to go by. In early 2012, the ministry contracted out the provision of court interpreters to Applied Language Services, which were soon bought out by Capita.
Those in the ministry ignored the advice given by a variety of professional bodies. Subsequently, the contract was subject to two House of Commons select committee investigations. The chairman of one of the committees found that: “The Ministry of Justice’s handling of the outsourcing of court interpreting services has been nothing short of shambolic.”
Since the contract started, countless trials have had to be adjourned due to interpreters failing to attend. Despite protestations from judges, magistrates, barristers and court staff, the ministry continues with the contract.
Nigel D Moore
Devauden, Monmouthshire
Bad motorway driving
SIR – I applaud proposals by Stephen Hammond, the transport minister, to introduce on-the-spot fines for motorists who “hog” the middle lane, tailgate drivers and commit other potentially dangerous offences (report, June 6).
But how will these new rules be enforced? I see an increasing number of drivers blatantly using mobile phones and escaping detection. So how will the police, with depleting resources and personnel, be able to implement these new laws?
Colin Brown
Kenley, Surrey
SIR – How will these regulations apply to the M25, and other four-lane motorways, where the middle-lane drivers are so confused that they are liberally split between lanes two and three?
Jackie Grey
Goodworth Clatford, Hampshire
SIR – Will these proposed rules discourage lorry drivers from hogging the middle lane? We have all been part of a long traffic queue behind two heavy vehicles going neck-and-neck for miles as one tries to overtake the other.
Roy Corlett
Southport, Lancashire
SIR – Along with many other careful, experienced drivers, I habitually drive in the centre lanes of motorways at exactly 70mph. Any one who considers themselves inconvenienced by this habit can only want to drive above the legal speed limit and should stick to the outside lane where everyone seems to have the same aim.
David Whitaker
Chawton, Hampshire
Unlocking potential
SIR – The suggestion by James Caan, the social mobility tsar, that
well-connected parents should defy their natural instincts by not helping their children to get a job until they are “seriously struggling” (report, June 4) is unrealistic and unhelpful.
We recently took a survey of several thousand current state-educated
sixth-formers to ask them what they felt was the biggest hurdle to getting into the leading professions; 89 per cent cited a lack of contacts. This sense of hopelessness results in young people not bothering to apply for the top jobs, which is a great pity for them and the economy alike.
Our organisation has been introducing state school students to leading firms such as Ernst & Young, Slaughter and May, and UBS at face-to-face events for the past eight years. Many of our students have gone on to win training contracts, internships and graduate roles.
Rather than persuading a firm to take on a student because they are from a poorer background, we let the students’ merits speak for themselves. All they need is the right forum.
Sibyl Zao-Sanders
Managing Director, Pure Potential
London N1
Uplifting service
SIR – Hannah Betts’s feature (June 5) about the demise of room service reminded me of when I used to stay at Claridge’s in the Nineties.
On one occasion, my wife and I returned to the hotel on a Saturday afternoon laden with shopping bags, only to find that there was a problem with the lift, which meant we had to walk up a couple of floors.
Shortly after returning to our suite, the management delivered champagne and canapes to apologise for the inconvenience. Now that really was room service.
Vincent Shanahan
Northwood, Middlesex
Health tourists
SIR – Peter Kellner’s excellent piece on people’s misconceptions about migrants and migration (telegraph.co.uk, June 4) rings very true for our work in Britain.
Reports appear almost daily of “health tourists” coming to Britain to take advantage of the NHS. But at the London clinic we run for migrants and other vulnerable people we find that the opposite is happening: people who are fully entitled to health care are not getting it, often due to the misconceptions of GPs and other medical staff. Moreover, less than 2 per cent of our service users left their country for personal health reasons, and almost half have no understanding or knowledge of the system in Britain and their right to care.
Leigh Daynes
Executive Director, Médecins du Monde
London E14
SIR – I totally agree with the Speaker of the House of Commons that Eastern European immigrants often have a better attitude to work than indigenous British workers (report, June 5).
We also have too many people on this crowded island. If we could exchange idle British workers for more industrious immigrants that might solve the problem.
Would the Speaker and his wife volunteer to start the ball rolling?
Robin Wrigley
Verwood, Dorset
Winter fuel perk
SIR – Derek Faulkner (Letters, June 4) asks why the winter fuel allowance, which Ed Balls, the shadow chancellor, believes should be abolished, starts at 60 and not 65. The reason is quite simple – the people who drafted the legislation were civil servants and they retire at 60. Obviously, they didn’t want to miss out for five years.
Max Goldwater
Meeth, Devon
SIR – Was Ed Balls auditioning for the part of Inspector Clouseau when he said that there was no evidence that the last Labour government was profligate?
Bill Giles
Newhaven, East Sussex
Vegetative state
SIR – I was intrigued to read (report, June 4) that vegetarians apparently live longer.
Whether this is true, or life just seems longer, is difficult to say.
Robert Mizen
Holt, Wiltshire
Inspiring the next generation of young royalists
SIR – Following a long family tradition of attending royal events, I took my three-year-old daughter, Florence, to London on Tuesday for the coronation service.
We thought it would be the perfect day to visit the Tower of London to see the crown jewels. Where St Edward’s Crown should have been, there was a small label declaring that it was “in use” (report, June 4). A slight understatement, but so very British.
Jocasta Fearn
Haywards Heath, West Sussex
SIR – St Edward’s Crown has not crowned every monarch since Charles II. In fact since Charles, only James II, William III, George V, George VI and the current Queen have been crowned with it.
Niall Garvie
Bromley, Kent
SIR – What struck me most about the coronation service was to see the unbroken continuity of monarchy sitting together.
The Queen, the Prince of Wales, the Duke of Cambridge and his unborn child together with Prince Harry. How fortunate we are.
Richard King-Evans
Hambye, Manche, France
SIR – I vividly recall, as a six-year-old, asking my father if we could go to London to watch the Queen’s coronation. He replied that he would take me next time. I fell for it.
Happily, the Queen has kept me waiting for 60 years to witness the next one – and long may she keep doing so.
Peter Higgins
West Wickham, Kent

Irish Times:

Sir, – Successive governments have completely ignored the constitutional requirement of Article 28, 4, 1° that “The Government shall be responsible to Dáil Éireann”. Instead they have dictated policy to the Dáil through an anti-democratic whip system.
Enda Kenny’s demand that Government parties support Seanad abolition without any reform of the dysfunctional Dáil/Government relationship is yet another outrageous contempt for democracy and the Constitution. – Yours, etc,
FRANK O’CONNOR,
Hillcourt Road,
Glenageary,
Co Dublin.
Sir, – The Seanad is the only private club in town where members are paid a salary and expenses. In addition there is unrestricted access to all the political movers and shakers. Is it any wonder many members are in uproar at its possible demise? – Yours, etc,
PADDY CORLEY,
Beechpark,
Ennis,
Co Clare.
Sir, – I listened with interest to Minister for Agriculture Simon Coveney and Senator Katherine Zappone debate the proposal to abolish the Seanad (on RTE’s Morning Ireland programme, June 6th). The Minister pointed, as supporting examples, to a number of upstanding, successful countries that have a single parliamentary chamber. What the Minister did not do was point out that some of the world’s most oppressive and dangerous regimes also belong to this dubious club. – Yours, etc,
DAVID WILKINS,
Vevay Road,
Bray,
CoWicklow.
Sir, – What on earth does the Senate do for the average bloke on the street, for the man on the top of the Clapham omnibus? Nothing. There is no “average bloke”, there is no “Clapham omnibus”. These have been replaced by the “worker” and the “Luas”.
So let the Senate go the way of cobble stones and tram rails, let it fade into the past like Molly Malone. In the future somone may ask “Did it ever exist at all, at all”. – Yours, etc,
KEN BUGGY,
Ballydubh Upper,
Co Waterford.
Sir, – The Taoiseach woke up one morning and proclaimed that he would abolish the Seanad to the complete surprise of his of everyone, including his party colleagues. He and Eamon Gilmore have no mandate whatsoever to proceed with this as they will find out in the referendum.
The Dáil is in far more urgent need of reform that the Seanad. So too is our entire system of local government. Abolition of the Seanad will not save the claimed €20 million a year – as a cost of €10 million was indicated by Oireachtas officials last year. Even €20 million would be a trivial amount if it helps prevent the erosion of democracy.
The Taoiseach has stated “Ireland had too many politicians for its size”, so let him cut the number of costly and numerous TDs and speed up rationalisation of local government.
Instead of abolition, give the Seanad a real role in the political process, as has been proposed by some Seanad members; introduce a list-based electoral system based on vocational, regional, emigrant and Northern Ireland constituencies to elect all members; and ban the use of the whip so that the senators can operate with complete independence. – Yours, etc,
BRIAN FLANAGAN,
Ardmeen Park,
Blackrock,
Co Dublin.
Sir, – At this time when the Government parties are refusing a free vote on a major medical and moral issue, it would seem wholly inappropriate to be also proposing the abolition of the Seanad, a forum for mature democratic debate. – Yours, etc,
EAMON FITZPATRICK,
Strandhill Road,
Sligo.
A chara, – Presumably, as the Taoiseach believes that we have too many politicians in Ireland, he will not move to fill the vacant Seanad seat left by Dr Martin McAleese and he will ask all those Senators who support his move to do away with the second chamber to resign their seats.
Surely none of them would want to be members of a club in which they do not believe nor wish to reform?
Yes, the current Seanad is past its sell-by date, but the need for appropriate checks and balances on government power has never been stronger. Building a better house of democracy requires planning and structural examination, not simply taking a bulldozer to an outdated wing of the building. – Is mise,
Cllr MALCOLM BYRNE,
Fianna Fáil,
Gorey,
Co Wexford
Sir, – The Taoiseach says An Seanad did nothing to challenge the excess of the Celtic tiger. And in the same period what did Fine Gael do? Perhaps An Taoiseach could let us know. We might then consider the case for abolishing Fine Gael. – Yours, etc,
DENIS HEALY,
Devon Park,
Salthill,
Galway.
Sir, – So our upper house is to be swept away in a flurry of no less than 40 amendments to our Constitution. It’s a wonder that such major surgery, conceived as it was on the back of an envelope, did not warrant consideration by our much heralded Constitutional Convention. Perhaps it is much too busy considering such pressing human rights issues as same sex marriage, the lowering of the voting age or the reduction of the presidential term.
One wonders how much thought has been put into this proposal and whether it is a coincidence that it’s called the Thirty Second Amendment to the Constitution Bill. – Yours, etc,
ANTHONY HARRIS,
Butterfield Park,
Rathfarnham,
Dublin 14.

Sir, – Irishwoman Samantha Power, President Obama’s new nominee as UN ambassador, faces a daunting challenge in her new role if and when confirmed by the US Senate (World News, June 6th).
Ms Power wrote her Pulitzer prize-winning book A Problem from Hell (2003) about the American response to genocide and mass atrocities because she says, “The United States decisions to act or not to act have had a greater impact on the victims’ fortunes than those of any other major power”. The then Senator Obama was so impressed with her book that he asked her to come and work for him, in 2005.
President Obama, since declaring in August 2011 that Syrian President Assad should go, has done virtually nothing to support the Syrian opposition in that regard .The Free Syrian Army is lightly armed in contrast to a regime which has an ongoing supply of scud missiles,“barrel bombs” dropped from helicopters which cause maximum death and destruction on the civilian population, and a huge arsenal of Russian-supplied armaments (unaffected by the EU arms embargo).
Both Human Rights Watch and the UN Commission of Inquiry have stated again in recent days that government forces have committed crimes against humanity and widespread and systemic human rights violations. Both organisations condemn atrocities on both sides, but acknowledge that the extent of violations perpetrated by government forces is much larger than those on the opposition side.
Defending the decision to establish a no-fly zone to prevent atrocities in Libya, Ms Power stated that failure to do so would have been “extremely chilling, deadly and indeed a stain on our collective conscience.”(University of Columbia March 2011, New York Times). It remains to be seen how Ms Power, if confirmed as UN ambassador, will address the shameful inaction of the US and international community on Syria. – Yours, etc,
VALERIE HUGHES,

Sir, – Yet again, after a day’s beautiful sunshine, I am returning from an early morning swim in the Forty Foot with my blood boiling.
We have to be one of the filthiest nations in the world.
The beautiful cove in Sandycove, Co Dublin, was like a war zone, filled with sanitary waste of all types, beer cans and endless bottles, crisp bags and odd socks. Worst of all, beside each of the bins was a pile of dirty nappies, abandoned there by people who presumably felt they did the right thing by leaving them beside a bin.
There are two wonderful men from the local county council who are down there every morning and do an incredible job, but such was the state of the place that some of the regulars started to clean up before they arrived as nobody should have been expected to have to tackle such a mammoth and soul-destroying task on their own.
What ever happened to the concept of bringing home your rubbish from the beach? I am sick of people saying there aren’t enough bins. There will never be enough bins for all the filth on a hot day at the beach.
What also disgusts me is the teenagers who come down to drink at the Forty Foot and throw glass bottles on the rocks. Do they have any idea of the type of cut someone could get from broken glass?
Finally, to the woman who allowed her dog to poo right at the entrance to the Forty Foot and then continued her walk . . . shame on you.
Let’s try to have some pride in this beautiful country of ours and let’s try to stop behaving like animals. – Yours, etc,
MARY QUINN,

A chara, – I hope Enda Kenny’s abolishing doesn’t stop at the Seanad.
There are other things that “modern Ireland” does not need that are from “a political system originally designed for 19th-century Britain”. Constitutional protection for TDs going to and from the Dáil springs to mind. – Is mise,
MICHAEL NASH,
Carrickmines Green,
Sir, – The term “neo-liberalism” has been extensively bandied about in Tom Dunne’s recent review of Lynch et al’s New Managerialism in Education, and also in letters to the Editor on the same subject from Shaun McCann and Patricia Palmer (June 6th).
Neo-liberalism has become a popular slogan of those on the left, and whatever it generally means to those who use it so freely, it is surely misapplied when it comes to higher education. If we have to identify an “ism” that is the curse of higher education, then managerialism fits the bill much better. There is nothing liberal about what is being done to universities: they are increasingly dictated to by the State and its agencies, notably the Higher Education Authority and Science Foundation Ireland. The voices of academics seem to count for very little.
Of course universities, which rely on taxpayers’ money, have to be accountable. But university autonomy and academic freedom are core (old-fashioned) liberal values which are under threat, not only from the State and its agencies but also from within, as non-academic “managers” gain increasing power and influence.
There is a world of difference between well-managed business corporations and the strangling bureaucracy which passes for management in much of the Irish public sector.
Neo-liberalism? Give me a break! – Yours, etc,
JOHN SHEEHAN,

Sir, – Eamon de Valera (May 29th) is disingenuous in how he presents the “facts” of the “bonds” sold in the US from 1919. In fact “bonds” were not sold, but bond-certificates, after the several lawyers in the Irish-American political organisation, The Friends of Irish Freedom (FOIF) eventually managed to convince an obstinate Eamon de Valera that it would be illegal to sell bonds in the US for a country which did not then exist, the Irish Republic.
The present Eamon de Valera has wilfully ignored the sad saga of the bond-certs drive from 1919 and has chosen to begin his vindication of his grandfather’s actions in the US from the later date of 1933. Quoting in full a letter written by the late Eamon to prove these “facts” is indefensible.
To understand the unedifying battle which Eamon de Valera waged against the Irish Free State, the FOIF and anyone who would thwart his intention to secure the monies raised in the bond-cert drive to further the programme of his Fianna Fáil party and for the establishment of a newspaper which would reflect the views of that party, read, Money for Ireland by Francis M Carroll (2002). – Yours, etc,
EILEEN McGOUGH,

Irish Independent:

* Watching ‘Prime Time’ on Tuesday filled me with a sense of revulsion: it was, in my view, an attempt to drum up inter-generational tensions.
Also in this section
Best of luck to all Leaving Cert pupils
The enemy within
You can’t legislate for suicidal thoughts
* Watching ‘Prime Time’ on Tuesday filled me with a sense of revulsion: it was, in my view, an attempt to drum up inter-generational tensions.
In my opinion it could be seen as an attempt to construct and supplant the idea that the older generation had escaped the clutches of the recession to the disadvantage of the under-45 age group.
Perhaps money could be rerouted from the older generation to support the young!
No proper emphasis was put on the fact that those living off the state pension had experienced cuts to fuel and telephone allowance and the loss of the Christmas bonus. A fee must also now be paid for prescriptions.
So whilst the core pension payment may remain unchanged, pensioners have experienced real cuts just like everybody else.
Bear in mind also that the older generation have already experienced savage cuts in the 1980s. They have paid their dues.
Age or ageing is the one thing that we all have in common. Try as we might we cannot escape the inevitable.
As a younger generation we must resist disingenuous attempts to create a “balanced economy” – to take from the old to give to the young.
We need to have confidence that when we reach retirement ourselves that we enjoy the same protections. The answer to improving the economic lot of the younger generation is to provide a stimulus to the economy, to incentivise companies to hire young people and to force banks to improve access to credit facilities.
All Irish people – young and old – deserve better.
Killian Brennan
Malahide Road, Dublin 17
BANKING ON A RIP-OFF
* Just in case there is anybody left who does not understand the brass neck of the banks, I had an average of about €1,800 in my little savings account for 2012.
I have just received a statement awarding me 14 cent in interest, less 4c tax.
Using fractional reserve banking, which they all do, my average amount can be lent out as €18,000 at about 8pc, which equals €1,440. That means that, using my money, the bank makes approximately 10,000 times as much interest as they give me.
And then they ask us to help them out when they can’t even do that properly. And our Government just grins and opens our wallets.
Dick Barton
Tinahely, Co Wicklow
MISSING THE POINT
* I watched another pointless ‘Prime Time’ programme on the economic situation. It dealt with the different effects the crisis is having on different generations. There was nothing incorrect or untrue said but it was another example of endless waffling in a morass of misunderstanding without ever getting close to the core of the problem.
The whole tenor of debate centred on ‘recession’ and the need for growth to lift everything out of stagnation and stunted consumption. No one asked if growth is possible any more in this world of plenty and if this is a recession at all or the beginning of a new era where everything can be available in abundance except work and where very new economic approaches are needed to cope with changed economic conditions.
It is as if such a concept was too terrible to contemplate never mind discuss publicly. Yet the evidence of such is all around in a technological world that far surpasses the wildest musings of science fiction writers of just a few decades ago.
Growth will never be the same again – neither will employment and small business.
Padraic Neary
Tubbercurry, Co Sligo
RISING TIDE OF PROTEST
* In the most recent opinion poll, published last weekend, opposition to legislating for the X case has risen to 26pc.
To all those journalists who have been doing their best to present opponents of this legislation as Neanderthals, it is nice to be able to say you cannot fool all of the people all of the time.
Jim Stack
Lismore, Co Waterford
* I wrote to you last December 19 in relation to the proposed legislation on terminations, expressing my belief that our position on that matter would “define the type of society we cherish”.
I suggested that common sense would dictate that on such a fundamental decision the citizens should demand a referendum. They should have the courage to make the decision themselves rather than renege on their responsibility and leave it to the politicians.
The debate has moved on since then. There is no doubt but that the vast majority of the population supports the possibility of termination where there is a significant physical threat to the life of the mother. It is equally clear that this is not the position where the threat arises from the risk of suicide. It is also true that citizens are now much better informed on the question of suicidality than at the time of previous referenda and that this question was not adequately argued before the Supreme Court.
The Taoiseach has insisted that the Government is obliged by the European Court to legislate for the X case. This is true but fundamentally the court’s direction to us was not on the specifics of the case itself. It was rather that Ireland had to give certainty to its position through legislation.
In democratically defining our society it is we, the citizens, who must make the basic choices.
Given the above, the citizens should demand a referendum on the question of suicidality. It is our duty to make this decision ourselves.
As your paper, rightly, constantly reminds us: we are defined by the choices we make.
John F Jordan
Killiney, Co Dublin
ENOUGH IS ENOUGH
* I question the relevance of continuing to force our children to learn religion in schools. Surely now is the time to introduce something more relevant which might improve our society or economy.
What have they learnt after so many years of enduring this subject?
To value the supernatural above evidence or reason?
To divide humanity into groups of us ‘the righteous’ and them? Such divisions have been the cause of tensions the world over; just take Israel or Northern Ireland.
Perhaps they argue that religion teaches us morals? Are they the morals that allow us to murder or rape today and beg forgiveness from our celestial dictator tomorrow? Or the morals that allow us to discriminate against homosexuals or women? Or perhaps the morals that say AIDS is bad but not quite as bad as condoms.
Maybe it’s the morals of a group that protect child rapists? Such morals we can very well do without.
Perhaps they claim that they teach us to respect other religions? Why should we respect other religions? What have they done to deserve our respect? If a religion teaches discrimination against women why should we respect it? People are free to believe in the tooth fairy if they so wish but do not force my children to learn about your tooth fairy and do not draw up legislation based on your supernatural beliefs.
So let us teach our children the value of free thinking and questioning above ancient dogma and censorship. Teach them the values of a society that separates church and state and the dangers of a group that claims to know ‘God’s will’ and would enslave us through holy decrees.
Cinthia Cruz
Galway
Irish Independent


Gardening

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8 June 2013 Garden

Off around the park listening to the Navy Lark, oh dear oh dear. Just for a change the destroyer Makepiece is stuck on the sandbank, and Troutbridge is sent out to tow her off. But she gets stuck too, and Nunky’s tug, gets stuck trying to pull them off. Priceless.
Another quiet day awfully tired get a little gardening done which this exhaustion would go away.
We watch The Pallaisers Glencora is pregnant and its a boy.
I win at scrabble but I get under 400 perhaps Mary can have her revenge tomorrow.

Obituary:

The Countess of Arran
The Countess of Arran, who has died aged 94, was reckoned the “fastest woman on water” and subsequently the “fastest granny on water” when, in 1980, she reached 103mph on Lake Windermere in a rocket-like craft called Skean-Dhu, an achievement that earned her the highest accolade in powerboating, the Segrave Trophy.

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Lady Arran 
6:08PM BST 07 Jun 2013
Although an unlikely champion powerboater, in October 1971, at the age of 53, Lady Arran followed in the wake of her hero Donald Campbell, racing her speedboat Highland Fling across Windermere in a hailstorm to lift the Class 1 record to 85.63mph. In her next 12 races, contending against all comers, she won three times and was never placed lower than third. In 1979, at the helm of her 26ft powerboat Skean-Dhu, she set a new Class II world record of 93mph.
Described by Harold Macmillan as the prettiest girl he had ever seen, she had married Sir Arthur (Kattendyke Strange David Archibald) “Boofy” Gore in 1937. In 1958 he succeeded his brother to become the 8th Earl of Arran and became an active member of the House of Lords. A passionate advocate of homosexual rights, he thrice introduced a Sexual Offences Bill, and also campaigned for the protection of badgers.
But “Boofy” Arran became best known in the 1960s for his weekly column in the London Evening News (where he was sometimes billed as “The Earl You Love To Hate”). This ran until 1978, when he suffered a stroke, a misfortune he blamed on his daily intake of a half-bottle of champagne before lunch.
While Fiona Arran pursued her powerboat interests, “Boofy” escaped in a car sent by the newspaper to write his column in peace, often musing about the wildlife in and around their remarkable home, Pimlico, near Hemel Hempstead in Hertfordshire.
For few would have guessed that Lady Arran, invariably arriving on any maritime scene in a Colquhoun tartan cap set at a jaunty angle, kept a sizeable menagerie there. Wallabies bounced around the pinewoods, while pot-bellied pigs, llamas and alpacas, caged birds (including a macaw which volunteered rude comments on proceedings, and others that uttered further expletives), horses, a fox and assorted dogs completed a bustling scene. The family wore gumboots in the house to fend off their cete (brood) of ankle-nipping badgers.
Lady Arran always called her current favourite badger Rosie. A succession of these creatures visited, and left a mark on, the smartest houses in England. “Nobody but Fiona would have carried this off,” remarked a friend.
Drawn as ever to the lochside, she kept a small house on the Isle of Inchconnachan on Loch Lomond. She boated the loch while her badgers lived beneath the veranda, chasing people hurrying to the jetty.
Meanwhile, Fiona Arran continued to win competitions, eventually completing the Round Britain offshore race, a demanding event even for the fit young men who made up the other contestants.
She often disembarked black and blue, after she and her navigator had been flung around like dice in a cup. One exclaimed: “The Lady only has two speeds — flat out, and stop!” Asked why she did it, she said simply: “For Scotland”.
Fiona Arran was also a painter. Her pictures were rich in atmosphere and feeling, and in due course there was an exhibition in St James’s. It was almost as if she could do anything she set her mind to: from the water she took to dry land and phaeton-racing. Prince Philip was said to be amazed by his latest hell-for-leather competitor, and Fiona Arran was described as driving like Boadicea.
She made a late comeback on water, helping to design and construct a revolutionary electrically-propelled 15ft hydroplane, An Stradag (The Spark). On November 22 1989 she piloted the tiny craft to another record, achieving a silent and environmentally-friendly 50.825mph. She was then 71.
Fiona Bryde Colquhoun was born on July 20 1918, the daughter of Sir Iain Colquhoun, 7th Bt of Luss, a war hero and explorer. Her mother, Dinah Tennant, was a champion golfer. Brought up on the banks of Loch Lomond, and educated locally, Fiona recalled her first thrill in a powerboat in 1932 when, aged 13, she rode in Miss England III, a hydroplane powered by Rolls-Royce aero-engines, during its trial run on the loch.
On a summer’s evening just before the war, she was aboard her husband’s supercharged Mercedes car when it achieved 100mph down Oxford Street (“That was rather fun!”). During the war she was a driver with the Wrens, and subsequently put her mettle to the test on the newly-built M1. When a policeman stopped her — yet again — she said: “Fast? Get in, officer, and I’ll show you what fast is.”
In 1965, having witnessed the Paris Six Hours circuit marathon on the Seine from the yacht of the British naval architect, Commander Peter du Cane, she bet a friend that the following year she would be one of the starters. True to her word, in 1966 she was the sole woman competitor and finished 14th out of 90, in a monohulled boat named Badger I.
The name was significant. With her husband, Lady Arran had campaigned for the protection of badgers, and eventually helped to pilot the Badger Protection Bill through both Houses of Parliament. They even had a badger motif attached to the radiator of their Rolls-Royce.
Bored by circuit racing, Lady Arran soon progressed offshore. In Badger II, a 20ft Don Shead design, she quickly set a new speed record of 55mph for Class III offshore powerboats. For the 1970 season she was at the helm of Badger III, a Cougar catamaran.
She then turned to a young naval architect, Lorne Campbell, who designed a series of three-point hydroplanes in which Lady Arran competed in offshore races. Having broken the Class I record on Windermere in 1971, she lifted the Class D championship in 1976 in the 26ft Skean-Dhu (Gaelic for “dagger”).
Campbell next came up with Cael-na-Mara (“Song of the Sea”), a 30ft reverse three-pointer with three Mercury outboard engines on the back. But the craft’s performance disappointed, and Lady Arran reverted to Skean-Dhu, in which, in 1979, she set a new Class II world record of 93mph. On August 11 the following year she piloted the vessel, with its twin 225hp Mercury outboards, to 102.45mph on Windermere. She announced her retirement in 1981.
Her husband died in 1983. The elder of their two sons, the 9th Earl of Arran, survives her.
The Countess of Arran, born July 20 1918, died May 16 2013

Guardian:

Today sees David Cameron host a “hunger summit” in London, the first in a series of events leading up to the G8 summit in 10 days’ time. The event will include a meeting of the New Alliance for Food Security and Nutrition, a private investment initiative launched by the G8 in order to expand the reach of multinational companies into Africa. The UK government has pledged £395m of taxpayers’ money to the scheme.
African civil society groups have condemned the New Alliance as part of a “new wave of colonialism” that will hand over their farmland to foreign investors and destroy their livelihoods. Over 40 companies have signed up to the initiative, including agribusiness giants Monsanto, Syngenta and Diageo, as well as Unilever, whose headquarters are the location of today’s hunger summit.
We stand in solidarity with African civil society in rejecting the New Alliance. We call on the prime minister to withhold the £395m in UK aid money that he has pledged to the initiative, and to invest it instead in support for ecological smallholder farming in Africa. Members of the public are invited to join our protest outside Unilever House at 10am today.
John Hilary War on Want, Kirtana Chandrasekaran Friends of the Earth, Deborah Doane World Development Movement, Martin Drewry Health Poverty Action, Teresa Anderson The Gaia Foundation, Kate Metcalf Women’s Environmental Network, Nick Dearden Jubilee Debt Campaign, Dan Taylor Find Your Feet, Pete Riley GM Freeze, Claire Robinson GMWatch
• Recent stories telling us to eat less meat to ease the food crisis in the developing world and that a vegetarian diet can help us to live longer confirm that there has never been a better time to ditch animal products. The United Nations has called the meat industry “one of the top two or three most significant contributors to the most serious environmental problems, at every scale from local to global”. And healthy vegetarians and vegans don’t just increase their own life expectancy – they also save up to 100 animals a year from immeasurable suffering on factory farms, in abattoirs and on the decks of fishing boats. So whether it’s for our health, world hunger, the environment or animals, there are so many reasons to drop animal products from our diets and not a single good reason not to. Come on, the sun is out – have a salad!
Ben Williamson
People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals

Your reports on the Prism programme (Revealed: how US secretly collects private data from AOL, Apple, Facebook, Google, Microsoft, Paltalk, Skype, Yahoo and YouTube, 7 June) reinforce the evidence of whistleblowers over the last decade that the National Security Agency, despite official denials, has been massively extending its capacity to intercept all forms of electronic communications and is harvesting private data on a systematic basis. Extremely concerning from the UK perspective is the role of Menwith Hill, the NSA spy base in North Yorkshire that plays a key role for the US as part of a global electronic surveillance network.
Menwith Hill has undergone a multibillion-dollar investment programme to enhance exactly those same capabilities for the interception of domestic communications and in its role co-ordinating intelligence-led warfare for special operations forces and remote-control weaponry like drones. All this is done effectively beyond any form of parliamentary accountability and is shrouded under the convenient cover of national security.
The NSA is now enormously powerful and is operating as a de facto secret state in ways that flout democratic norms and international law, with serious implications for personal and political freedoms.
Steve Schofield
Bradford
• Re your report on Verizon supplying the NSA with details of its customers (US orders phone firm to hand over data on millions of calls, 6 June), I’d recommend reading The Shadow Factory by James Bamford, which details the amount of illegal wiretapping carried out by US governments in recent years. What is particularly worrying is that our own politicians seem happy to emulate them without any public debate taking place.
Nick Ryan
Seaford, East Sussex

Reading Professor John Wallwork’s tribute to Benjamin Milstein (Obituary, 5 June) I was struck by his comment that Milstein, “having abandoned all Jewish beliefs … marched in support of Spanish anti-fascists and was committed to socialist ideals”. As a boy in wartime Britain, I was taught that equality and justice – ie the antithesis of fascism – were fundamental Jewish beliefs, whether or not religious belief persisted. After many more years, during which my religious beliefs have all but vanished, I still hold to this view.
Mark Goldberg
London
• I am saddened, and angered, to read John Carvel’s comment piece (The NHS still has a way to go on brain donation, 29 May). The Guardian published my letter back in 2009 (20 October) detailing the events – including poor communication between key players – surrounding the mismanaged removal of my husband’s brain for research. It would appear that little progress has been made in nearly four years.
Annie Feltham
Brighton
• I was disappointed that John Crace’s article about long words (Do you know what our longest words mean?, G2, 5 June) didn’t include porkchopbeefsteakhamandegghamburgersteakorliverandbacon (in the OED under hamburger) or feeling-upset-physically-and-mentally-with-anticipatory-excitement-and/or-anxiety (in the OED explaining journey-proud).
Tony Augarde
Author, Wordplay
• “Film of the day” in your TV listings (G2, 7 June) is apparently Spielberg’s WWII epic, “Saving Private Lives”. Presumably in a double bill with “Brief Encounters of the Third Kind”?
Robin Nielsen
Wickham Market, Suffolk
• Why do people with cancer always “battle” it (Letters, 7 June)? I’ve had it, been treated, recovered. No battling involved.
Marilyn Ross
London
• Isn’t it time to stop this media frenzy and move on to pastures new?
Rowena Rowlands
Wigan, Lancashire

The decision to compensate the victims of torture and illegal detention during the Mau Mau insurgency in Kenya (Britain has said sorry to the Mau Mau, 7 June) is heartening and must lend weight to claims for compensation by those whose civil and human rights were abused by British security forces in the first colonial counterinsurgency campaign of the postwar era, in Palestine.
Illustration: Gary Kempston
Will the government now apologise for the torture and murder of a 16-year-old boy, Alexander Rubowitz, who was seized by an undercover police squad led by Major Roy Farran in the Rehavia district of Jerusalem on 6 May 1947? Rubowitz was a member of LEHI, the Fighters for the Freedom of Israel, a proscribed underground organisation responsible for numerous assassinations and bombings. But when he was apprehended he was doing nothing worse than distributing anti-British propaganda. He was taken to a deserted area outside Jerusalem, where Farran struck him repeatedly on the head with a rock, causing his death. Farran admitted this to his commanding officer, Colonel Bernard Fergusson, and said the policemen with him had stripped the boy’s body and mutilated it. The corpse was never recovered. Farran was subsequently investigated by the Palestine police force and arrested. He fled custody twice. In October 1947 a court martial acquitted him on the grounds that, if there was no body, no murder could be proved. Subsequent attempts by the Rubowitz family to bring Farran to justice using criminal and civil proceedings were all foiled.
Roy Farran died in Canada in 2006, having enjoyed a successful career as a newspaper publisher and politician. He is regarded as a heroic figure and his wartime exploits in the SAS are legendary. However, his activity in Palestine became a model for British counterinsurgency techniques in Malaya, Kenya, Aden and Northern Ireland, always with disastrous consequences. An apology to the Rubowitz family, who have not given up seeking justice, would acknowledge their cause and signify a repudiation of the covert, semi-legal techniques that have repeatedly dishonoured the British armed forces in operations against insurgents.
David Cesarani
Research professor in history, Royal Holloway, University of London
• The government’s near-admission of the use of torture against Mau Mau insurgents in the 1950s is welcome but raises wider points. Not only are similar issues of torture against those who sought independence in other former British colonies outstanding, but the question of British history itself is also raised.
Do we take it that even now Mr Gove is setting up arrangements to make sure that the now admitted actual history of British action against the Mau Mau is taught as part of “our island story”?
Keith Flett
London
• If it is true that the Foreign Office and Ministry of Justice have said any future claims for compensation for mistreatment during the colonial period “could be heard under the secret court system established by the Justice and Security Act” (UK faces more torture claims, 7 June), the government will have some explaining to do. The relevant provisions of the act relate to issues of national security. How can they possibly relate to events that allegedly occurred 50 and more years ago?
Jeremy Beecham
Shadow justice spokesman, House of Lords
• Last week the UN Committee against Torture released its concluding observations after a review of the UK’s record on preventing, punishing and remedying torture and ill-treatment (UN blasts Britain over human rights record since 9/11, 1 June).
Among the committee’s important recommendations is a call on the UK to establish without delay an inquiry into the alleged complicity of UK officials in the torture of detainees held overseas. It says the UK government must address the shortcomings of the previous, deeply flawed detainee inquiry.
Meanwhile, the UN has echoed a call made by numerous others that the UK government publish the detainee inquiry’s interim report, finished almost a year ago, to the fullest extent possible.
The establishment of a new inquiry offers a genuine opportunity for the UK to draw a line under these alleged violations, to restore public confidence and to set an example to other countries in how to respond to such serious allegations.
It is crucial that the UK take immediate and meaningful steps to implement the committee’s recommendations.The UK must take immediate steps to implement the recommendations.
Kate Allen Director, Amnesty International UK, Keith Best Chief executive, Freedom from Torture, Susan Bryant Director, Rights Watch (UK), Shami Chakrabarti Director, Liberty, Cori Crider Legal director, Reprieve, Dadimos Haile Interim director, Redress, David Mepham UK director, Human Rights Watch, Angela Patrick Director of human rights policy, Justice, Muhammad Rabbani Managing director, Cageprisoners
• It has been almost a decade since two children, 15-year-old Gareth Myatt and 14-year-old Adam Rickwood, died following the use of painful restraint. Gareth died from asphyxia after being restrained by staff in the G4S-run Rainsbrook secure training centre. Adam hanged himself in Serco-run Hassockfield secure training centre, after being subjected to a karate chop to the nose (termed a “nose distraction”). Adam’s nose bled for about an hour afterwards; he left a note asking what gave staff the right to hit a child. Although this technique was eventually banned, the deliberate infliction of pain continues to be authorised by ministers, including when children are being strip-searched. An inspection report published on Ashfield, another Serco-run child jail, revealed that two boys had suffered broken bones while staff forcibly restrained them (Ashfield youth jail condemned over unacceptable levels of violence, 4 June).
We urge the UK government to comply with the recommendations made by the UN Committee against Torture that restraint against children be used only as a last resort and exclusively to prevent harm to the child or others; that all methods of physical restraint for disciplinary purposes be abolished; and that the use of any technique designed to inflict pain on children be banned.
Deborah Coles Co-director, Inquest, Frances Crook Director, Howard League for Penal Reform, Juliet Lyon Director, Prison Reform Trust, Phillip Noyes Director of strategy and development, NSPCC, Paola Uccellari Director, Children’s Rights Alliance for England, Carolyne Willow Children’s rights campaigner

Independent:

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Steve Connor’s uncritical regurgitation of GM propaganda (“If GM crops are bad, show us the evidence” 3 June) does little justice to a debate of fundamental significance to future human welfare and planetary impact: global agricultural policy.
Industry claims of reduced pesticide use have been challenged in peer-reviewed literature, which indicates the opposite. Lower carbon emissions (primarily through no-till agriculture) are misattributed, since adoption of the latter mostly pre-dates the introduction of GM in 1996. And, of the much-vaunted productivity gains, there is precious little evidence.
What is evident, however, is that the headline-capturing improvements secured in recent years have all been achieved through conventional plant breeding, and at a miniscule fraction of the cost of GM: the NIAB super-wheat (30 per cent potential gain in productivity); Nerica rice (four times as productive as traditional varieties, with higher protein levels, pest, disease and drought resistance); and flood-resistant Scuba Rice to quote just three examples. Non-GM breeding continues to be far more successful for all of the traits for which the GM industry claims indispensability in meeting future food demand.
The argument that no one has died or fallen ill as a result of GM food is misleading and premature. Epidemiology attests that it can take decades for negative health impacts to be recognised in morbidity and mortality statistics.
It is not necessary for GM activists to “put up or shut up”. Their arguments have been articulated over decades in a now comprehensive case against the corporatist industrialisation of agriculture which has proven so consummately detrimental to our landscapes, biodiversity, soil integrity, plant, livestock and human health, socio-economic welfare and food security; and for which GM represents the latest manifestation of long-discredited, ultimately unscientific, reductionist thinking.
Nigel Tuersley, Tisbury, Wiltshire
 
Steve Connor is quite right that it’s “put up or shut up” time for GM, but he’s got it the wrong way around. It’s high time that those who are so keen that we buy and become dependent on this expensive ‘“technology” put up proof that it’s safe, before we undertake yet another massive and unpredictable experiment with our one and only ecosphere, in addition to global warming.
The idea that something be considered “safe” just because no one has yet shown it otherwise would not wash with Airbus or Boeing; why should it with Monsanto or Bayer?  Thalidomide, Lindane and DDT were declared safe on this basis, as were many other similar products which later turned out to be anything but. If the benefit is great enough then perhaps we may take the risk, as with, for example, a polio vaccine, but not otherwise.
Then there’s the issue of choice: if Mr Connor is happy to eat these products then he is free to do so, but others must have the freedom not to, and to know when their food is tainted.
Dr Ian East, Islip, Oxfordshire
 
TB threat from badgers is real
Some of your correspondents have misunderstood my comments on the risk of bovine TB spreading to humans (“Badger cull has no basis in science”, 5 June). Bovine TB led to the slaughter of 28,000 cattle last year and cost farmers and taxpayers close to £100m. We want to eradicate this disease to protect the health of our cattle and welfare of our dairy and beef industries.
Bovine TB is a zoonosis. It now presents a very low risk to people in the UK because of our huge efforts to find and cull infected cattle, pasteurisation of milk and inspection of beef at slaughter. However transmission is possible and does occur to humans and other mammals in small numbers. Naturally, if bovine TB continues to spread, and the numbers of infected cattle and badgers increase still further, the risk of infection to other mammals and humans would inevitably increase.
It is wrong to suggest the Government’s policy of TB eradication is not based in science. The Randomised Badger Control Trials, a large-scale scientific study carried out over 10 years, has shown that culling badgers can make a difference in reducing incidents of TB in cattle when used alongside other cattle controls.
Nigel Gibbens, UK Chief Veterinary Officer, Defra, London SW1
 
In response to Wendy Irvine (Letters, 30 May), it puzzles me that if I suggest monitoring hedgehog numbers in the badger-cull areas, I am shouted down by the supposedly pro-wildlife lobby. I’m not saying badgers are definitely responsible for the dramatic decline in hedgehog numbers, but they might be, and no one yet knows for sure.
Where I live hedgehogs are seen very rarely and badgers can be seen almost nightly when driving. There are few if any of the factors that are often quoted to explain the decline in hedgehog numbers. The hedge system is virtually the same as in medieval times. There is no mass use of slug pellets by farmers, and Defra Stewardship grants mean farming is less intense here than it used to be. Earthworms are very plentiful as evidenced by an explosion in the population of moles. There is very little additional housing development so traffic has hardly increased.
I don’t enjoy killing things and I think badgers are beautiful animals, but given that badger culls are likely to go ahead, I would like to see plans to monitor hedgehog numbers in those areas too.
Patrick Cosgrove, Chapel Lawn, Shropshire
 
Mosque attack is attack on peace
The burning of a London mosque (report, 6 June) is as abhorrent as the burning of Salman Rushdie’s Satanic Verses in 1989 and the Nazi book-burnings in Berlin in 1933. Such incendiary acts are designed to fan the flames of hatred and should be condemned by all  peace-loving people.
Stan Labovitch , Windsor
 
Last thing Syria needs is more arms
Mounting concern from MPs about the Government’s stance on whether to arm opposition forces in Syria is completely understandable (“Cameron relents to give MPs vote on Syria”, 7 June). While William Hague talks of the “carefully controlled circumstances” under which weaponry might be dispatched, the Government has provided no adequate detail on this.
The urgent question that MPs must ask David Cameron and his colleagues is this: what credible safeguards can be put in place that will ensure UK-supplied weaponry is not used to commit human rights abuses in Syria? And what guarantees can the Government provide over such safeguards?
The difficulties are legion. How can the UK effectively monitor the use of its military equipment? How will officials, sitting in Whitehall or the Ministry of Defence, prevent weapons being transferred  from one opposition group to another? And how do they stop the theft or forcible seizure of arms by extremist groups, including ones allied to al-Qa’ida? MPs and the public will need convincing answers to these and other questions before they are ready to believe that sending weapons to Syria might actually relieve Syria’s suffering, not make it worse.
Kate Allen , Director, Amnesty International UK , London EC2
 
For Christ’s or Allah’s or Buddha’s or Ron Hubbard’s or David Icke’s sake, please, if you find you’ve backed the wrong side in the Syrian civil war, accept it. Please don’t do a Tony Blair and use the rumour of the use of WMDs (in this case chemical weapons) to justify arming the rebels.
Consider the possibility that Russia may be correct in believing that regime change imposed on an Arab state by the West would be another disaster. Also consider that a victory by Assad would be a major setback for al-Qa’ida and its militant Islamic fundamentalist allies.
Losing face over a bad decision hardly compares with the extra thousands of people losing their lives if this tragic civil war is extended by the West supplying more arms.
John Lewis
Swansea
This issue needs to be settled through co-ordinated international backing for a meeting between Assad and the Syrian opposition forces. Those who oppose such a meeting can only do so because of their hidden vested interests.
Brian Woollard, London W5
 
Male doctors are the problem
Those quoted in your report on female doctors and the NHS miss the critical point (“Health minister Anna Soubry criticised for suggesting female doctors who work part-time after having children are a drain on NHS”  5 June). What about the male doctors? If all doctors who are parents were expected to invest some of their time in raising the next generation of employees, then the debate about women doctors in the NHS would end. The problem is how male doctors work, not how female doctors work.
Duncan Fisher, Crickhowell,  Powys
   
Soldiers in the classroom
Michael Gove has announced  his latest back-to-the-future initiative, harking back to the 1950s: soldiers without degrees can train to be teachers in two years, rather than three.
Is Gove’s motivation a response to: a) the need for more teachers; b) the need to have professionals who will blindly follow orders, however stupid; or c) both?
Gove’s dictatorial behaviour has made the profession unattractive for creative and hardworking qualified teachers.
Jane Eades, London SW11
 
Green dad
Following Dominic Lawson’s article (“There are green vested interests too… ” 3 June), I would like to declare a vested interest in a green economy: my one-year-old son. Had I but the means, I’d be lobbying hard on his behalf for a cleaner energy future. Lawson disingenuously says that climate change doesn’t threaten the planet, but it threatens every animal on it, including us. And none more so than our children, who will have to live with what comes next.
Dr Richard Milne, Edinburgh
 
Super-achievers
Reading the correspondence on proposed new scoring systems which allow room for expansion at the top (Letters, 6 June) makes me think we should go back to having percentage scores as we were able to before grades were introduced. This can give unlimited flexibility. I clearly remember a mathematics teacher giving several of us a score of 105% in an end-of-term exam. The possibilities are endless.
Pat Johnston, Hexham, Northumberland

Times:

‘Is it not likely that the NHS would face even greater problems were it not for job-sharing women GPs?’
Sir, Anna Soubry, the health minister who suggested that women who work part time while looking after their children place a huge burden on the NHS (report, June 6), should know that many male GPs also work part time in the health service and use their NHS training for more lucrative employment in the private sector.
Janet Mercy
Codicote, Herts
Sir, My wife is a GP, job sharing with another woman, who has three children. I have little doubt that my wife, 61, would have given up working a long time ago had she had to continue full time, and that her job sharer would not have resumed work, at least for some years until her children had grown up, had they not been able to job share. I imagine that this example may not be rare. If, therefore, 70 per cent of medical students are women, as you report, is it not likely that the NHS would face even greater problems were it not for job-sharing women GPs?
Michael Stannard
Verbier, Switzerland
Sir, The number of female doctors, consultants and GPs has increased over the past 50 years in line with policy, patient choice and equal opportunities. Female doctors have fewer complaints made about them and have been shown to practise more “patient centred” medicine.
Many of my GP colleagues, both male and female, work part time as the pressure of full-time clinical work often results in burnout. Most spend their “free time” doing practice paperwork, attending NHS meetings, teaching and improving their skills with additional training.
Dr Sarah Purdy
Part-time GP and Reader in Primary Health Care, University of Bristol
Sir, If 70 per cent of medical students are female it will be increasingly difficult for male patients to see a male GP. Some men may be reluctant to see a female GP about a problem — and putting off that first GP appointment could have fatal consequences.
Caroline Tayler
Nutley, E Sussex
Sir, With 30 years’ experience as a mother and a part-time GP I believe there should be equal numbers of places at medical school entry for boys and girls. The present system discriminates against boys who are often less mature at 18 than their female colleagues, thus denying the NHS enough men to fill the specialties to which they are more suited.
Many women opt out of full-time work for family and other reasons. Part-time general practice has its place but should be supported by full-time GPs working within each practice. There are some serious drawbacks to working part time for both patient and doctor including the inevitable lack of continuity.
Part-time practitioners are much more likely to wish to leave the job behind while returning to their other domestic commitments. We should return to a 24-hour commitment by GPs to the care of their patients.
Dr E. Harford-Cross
Kirkby Malzeard, N Yorks
Sir, It is disturbing to hear such sexist language from a health minister. The evidence strongly suggests that two female (or male) doctors working a 50/50 job share due to family commitments are more productive than a single doctor. Failures in the NHS today come from decades of political mismanagement, and for a health minister to blame women GPs is neither fair nor constructive.
Dr Hannah Mitchell
Nottingham

‘If gardeners allow themselves to be seen as blissed-out then, however well trained, the profession will continue to be regarded as a cosy option’
Sir, Andrea Brunsendorf is not right to tell her trainee gardeners that they may as well settle for low pay because they, unlike other professionals, will at least love their work (letter, June 4).
When I was gardening for a living people often said “I wish I had your job” and “Do they pay you for this?” This exemplified the British confusion between gardening for fun at home and skilled professional gardening.
It is assumed, because so many people love visiting gardens and growing plants at home (and why not), that everyone could succeed as a professional if only they had time and application. It is not so.
If professional gardeners want better pay, they must fight the misconception that theirs is a badly paid lifestyle choice and make it clear that gardening is a serious profession like any other, with technology and deadlines, budgets and staff, practised by specialists.
That they work in attractive surroundings is irrelevant. If gardeners allow themselves to be seen as blissed-out then, however well trained, the profession will continue to be regarded as a cosy option; salaries will remain low and young people will continue to be reluctant to join the profession. All this jolliness is desperately counter-productive.
Stephen Anderton
The Times Garden Writer
Abergavenny, Monmouthshire

Catholic Christians might consider using “sacrament of matrimony” when applied to union between a woman and a man in a lifelong commitment
Sir, In an acrimonious and violent world, one debate which has caused some of that anger has been resolved. The House of Lords, in its wisdom, has decided on the issue of marriage between same-sex partners.
Freedom of choice is a precious gift; we are given this freedom out of love and nothing can change that; it cannot and must not be tampered with. It would be unrealistic and futile not to recognise the choices of others.
As a Catholic Christian I happen to choose to believe in freedom as God-given and I choose to live by certain guidelines in how I exercise this freedom. I am free to believe this at the present time in this country.
I suggest that it might be useful to re-examine our terminology re “marriage”. Catholic Christians (and others) might consider using “sacrament of matrimony” when applied to union between a woman and a man in a lifelong commitment of freely-chosen love open to the gift of children. This would avoid confusion when referring to partnerships of people of other beliefs (or none).
Sister Mary Stephen Astley, OSB
Minster, Kent

Renewables must not be used as a ‘political football’ and all aspects of green energy must be taken into consideration when decisions are made
Sir, Onshore wind is supported by 68 per cent of the British public, and actively opposed by only 11 per cent, according to Government research. This does not mean we should ignore local opposition, but it is important to remember that those who oppose developments are more likely to make a noise about their views than those who support or have no strong views either way. The same research found that 56 per cent of the public are “happy to have a large-scale renewable energy development in my area”.
Our concern is that renewables are increasingly being used as a political football (“New rules make it easier to block wind farms”, June 6). Renewable energy is a key driver of green jobs and economic growth and helps us reduce our dependence on volatile international fossil fuels markets.
Gaynor Hartnell
Renewable Energy Association
London SW1
Sir, Erica Wagner (Thunderer, June 7) is one of many who suffer from the existence of windfarms. My village and three surrounding villages have been threatened for over a year by the possibility of a windfarm in our midst. It will consist of 400ft-high turbines. The stark contrast in scale with the domestic character of the area seems to be of no interest to the developers. I hope that the new powers to block unsightly projects will elicit some awareness from the industry where it has hitherto been absent.
Professor Christopher Riley
(emeritus), architect, Newark, Notts

The government has set up The Future of Farming group to look at how new blood can be encouraged into the farming sector
Sir, As a chartered surveyor working in the “rural outpost” of Powys, I am all too aware of farmers’ falling numbers (“How British workers left the land to sow careers in services sector”, June 6).
The industry requires 60,000 new entrants over the next ten years and with the competing attractiveness of service sector careers, the government has set up The Future of Farming group to look at how new blood can be encouraged into the sector.
Agriculture is a primary industry that underpins society through a complex interrelationship of food production, provision of landscape, biodiversity habitat (or lack of) and recently identified public goods (ecosystem services) from the land.
The stakes are high, with increasing food prices, declining biodiversity and a real need to produce more from less while reducing the impact on the environment.
Farming is the new challenge for our next generation.
Rob Yorke
Abergavenny, Monmouthshire

Telegraph:

SIR – This year marks the 60th anniversary of the Queen’s coronation and the conquest of Everest, the record of both events being widely reported in the media.
It is also the 60th anniversary of the end of the war in Korea (“the Forgotten War”), a three-year conflict that cost the lives of 33,000 American servicemen and more than four-and-a-half million Korean soldiers and civilians.
Though the British and Commonwealth contribution was comparatively small, British forces lost more than 1,000 killed in action, and a further 3,500 were wounded, missing or taken prisoner, a high proportion being national servicemen.
While rightly mourning the tragic losses we have suffered in Afghanistan, let us also remember the heavy price paid by our Armed Forces in Korea, and in the many subsequent conflicts in which they have so nobly fought.
Maj Gen Bryan Webster (retd)
Ewshot, Surrey

SIR – It was inadvisable for the new social mobility tsar, James Caan, who was hand-picked by the Government to promote opportunities for less advantaged young people, to tell parents not to help their children get jobs when he employs his own daughter in three roles (report, June 5).
Isn’t it time the Government reduced its reliance on celebrities, whose main objective seems to be self-promotion rather than the health of the nation?
This is another embarrassing episode for Nick Clegg, the Deputy Prime Minister, who claims to be striving to make a better Britain for the less fortunate. He himself has personally benefited from being given a leg up the ladder by who he knows, not what he knows.
Daniel Todaro
Newbury, Berkshire
SIR – To focus on whether or not James Caan employs his daughters is to miss the point. The children of well-connected parents often come to the world of work complete with the networks and the savoir faire that get them through the door. They can impress employers anywhere, any time. Children from less privileged backgrounds can’t. Their parents lack the business connections, their schools lack the careers advice and they themselves lack the confidence and presentation skills to propel them past the interview.
Related Articles
Remember our noble Armed Forces in Korea
07 Jun 2013
The objective of a social mobility tsar is to help level the playing field on which the privileged and the disadvantaged can compete. It is a good idea.
If Mr Caan can help to advance the life chances of those lower down the social scale in anything like the same way he advanced those of his daughters, we’ll be lucky to have him.
James McCreary
CEO, Career Academies UK
London E14
SIR – I believe that employers should apply more of a parental attitude to young people. If we would help our own children into a job, why not others? My answer is “corporate parenting”, whereby employers take on responsibility for giving young people a helping hand into jobs.
Employers on my Hand Picked jobs programme offer an unemployed young person a three-month paid job, references and ongoing support. By using their contacts and acting as a “corporate parent” this often leads to permanent employment.
Gerard Eadie
Dunfermline, Fife
SIR – Toby Young (Comment, June 5) suggests that an improved education will better serve social mobility, and endorses the pupil premium idea. Does he not read the Telegraph? Two recent reports indicated no correlation between outcomes and expenditure per head or per school. Gordon Brown’s theory of input being all that matters has seemingly entered the nation’s psyche.
G P Brown
Norwich
Paying for elderly care
SIR – We write as senior advisers to the elderly care sector. Given that in 2020 more than a quarter of us will be 60 or over, we need to shift our mindset about how we pay for elderly care.
As Baroness Bakewell pointed out in her speech to the House of Lords on May 21 following the first debate of the Coalition’s new Care Bill, there is no money for the state to pay for all of our care.
The majority of us have large amounts of capital in our properties. But we are all dogged by the belief that we “owe” it to our children to leave them this property. Why are we prepared to compromise on quality care in order to give the younger generation a leg-up?
Either we can realise equity in our houses to access the capital that is available to pay for care, or we can sell our former family homes to downsize. This is the most sensible way for us to pay for our care, whether in our own homes or in residential or specialist care homes.
Simon Wainwright
RGA UK
Chris Cain
Grace Consulting
Simon Chalk
Age Partnership
Keith Gold
Consultant
Reece Howe
Kirkwood Care
Derek Miller
Miller Consultants
Paul Ridout
Ridouts LLP
Gavin Ingham Brooke
Spada
Motorway driving
SIR – The problem with middle-lane hoggers (Letters, 6 June) would not exist if, as in America, overtaking was allowed on both sides. It simplifies traffic flow and is even more important where motorways are being extended to include four or even more lanes, as with the M25.
Derek Brumhead
New Mills, Derbyshire
SIR – Unlike David Whitaker (Letters, June 5), I have always had a good knowledge of the Highway Code, have observed its rules, and been considerate to other road users. I never drive in any lane when the one to the left is unoccupied for a safe and sensible distance. I suggest Mr Whitaker contacts the Institute of Advanced Motorists for retraining.
David Lowe
West Malvern, Worcestershire
Meddling in Syria
SIR – In 1916 Sir Mark Sykes of Britain and François Georges-Picot of France decided on the new frontiers to be drawn for Palestine, Iraq, Syria, Jordan, Lebanon and Iran following the collapse of the Ottoman Empire.
The lines drawn in the sand took little account of tribal or religious differences. In doing that, we unintentionally created a boiling pot of cultural and religious divide. TE Lawrence, the Arabist, warned that it was a bad idea, but no one listened. David Cameron would be well advised to revisit the papers of that time.
We have no right or mandate to lecture Middle Eastern countries, nor side with any faction against another. What is happening in Syria is tragic in the extreme and we in all humility should understand the part we played in creating it. We need to find a passive solution to heal these wounds, not compound them by arming the opposition, as Mr Cameron proposes.
Philip Congdon
Gard, France
It’s in the jeans
SIR – Your feature “Donning denim? Check your birth certificate first” (June 5) perpetuates the myth that age is a barrier to wearing certain items of dress.
My boyfriend is well over 40 and I would challenge most men in their twenties and thirties to look as good in skinny-fit jeans.
Julia King
Sutton in Ashfield, Nottinghamshire
Welfare untruths
SIR – April saw some of the most controversial and wide-ranging changes to the benefits system in a generation. Policies affecting the lives of millions of the most vulnerable people in our society were introduced. In a letter to the Prime Minister, we have highlighted three demonstrably untrue claims made by politicians in support of these reforms.
These are, that 900,000 disability claimants stopped claiming sickness benefit “rather than” face a medical assessment; that 8,000 people had got into employment as a result of the total benefits cap policy; and that there was a rush of claims for Disability Living Allowance before new rules introduced a tough medical assessment.
All three of these statements have drawn on high-quality Government statistical data which has then been misused and misinterpreted. All serve to undermine the credibility of benefit claimants.
The signatories of this letter hold no common view on welfare reform. However, we do hold the view that these misrepresentations deny people the respect and dignity that they are due.
We are calling on the Prime Minister to ensure that these untruths are corrected, and that similar statements are no longer allowed to pollute the public debate.
The Revd Stephen Keyworth
The Baptist Union of Great Britain
The Right Revd Nick Baines
Bishop of Bradford
Niall Cooper
National Coordinator, Church Action on Poverty
Alison Gelder
Chief Executive of Housing Justice
The Revd R. Kenneth Lindsay
President of the Methodist Church in Ireland
The Revd Dr Mark Wakelin
President of the Methodist Conference
The Revd Robert Hopcroft
Chairman of the Moravian Church in Great Britain and Ireland
Paul Parker
Recording Clerk, Quakers in Britain
The Revd Sally Foster-Fulton
Convener of the Church and Society Council, the Church of Scotland
The Very Revd Ian D Barcroft
Convener, Church in Society Committee, Scottish Episcopal Church
The Revd Roberta Rominger
General Secretary of the United Reformed Church
The Revd Carol Wardman
Bishops’ Adviser for Church and Society, the Church in Wales
Reading habits
SIR – I haven’t purchased from an actual bookshop in years (Letters, June 5). As an avid reader I buy a large number of books online, both printed and in e form.
Books are too expensive in a bookshop. Do I really want to drive through heavy traffic to my local town, pay a small fortune to park and struggle through the British weather, when I can have the books delivered, free, to my own front door?
Ian Gill
Great Ouseburn, Yorkshire
SIR – Since the sale of beer and wine became legal in supermarkets we have seen a marked rise in alcoholism and the increased incidence of under-age drinking.
Perhaps we will now see a similar improvement in reading habits and literacy standards.
Julian Firth
London NW5
Are peacocks misbehaving across the country?
SIR – Our village has also had a fly-in peacock, Charlie, for the last year (Letters, June 6). He is extremely decorative, but also very loud. His positive visual qualities, however, are negated by his effect on flower beds which he destroys, taking the early flowers as they appear.
Recently, things have been complicated further by a fly-in peahen, who is even noisier, and sounds like a rusty donkey.
Is this happening up and down the country?
Robert Kirby
Maer, Staffordshire
SIR – Here in East Horsley we, too, have a random peacock that turned up over a year ago. He settled in next door, where a new house was being built. The builders adopted him when they found his footprints in the cement one morning, and named him Nigel.
He wakes us up at 5am and pops into the gardens of several houses in our road, helping himself to bird food, scraps and flower heads, and showing off.
I gave up trying to find out who his owner is months ago, but if anybody knows of a peahen wanting a mate we may be able to get a lie-in on Sunday mornings.
Helen Taylorson
East Horsley, Surrey
SIR – In the late Nineties I worked at the Institute of Orthopaedics at the Royal National Orthopaedic Hospital in Stanmore. Percy the peacock was an ever-present car park attendant, frequently blocking the entrance to the offices.
To divert his vigilant behaviour, two peahens were purchased in the hope that he would be distracted. Two weeks later he threw himself in front of an oncoming car and was killed.
Karen Pollak
Watford, Hertfordshire

Irish Times:

Sir, – I graduated from the National University of Ireland in 1973, which entitled me to a vote in Seanad elections. I have never exercised that entitlement because I never believed senators should be elected by a privileged minority who were given votes because of schooling or political position.
How anyone can argue for the retention of an elitist, undemocratic institution is beyond me.
If the Seanad is to be retained – and I don’t believe it should be – let everyone who is on the electoral register have a vote and let Seanad elections be held on the same day as Dáil elections, thus putting an end to the practice of using it as a step up to or down from the Dáil. – Yours, etc,
JOHN MacKENNA,
Muine Bheag, Co Carlow.
Sir, – In opening his campaign to kill off An Seanad, the Taoiseach Enda Kenny demagogically proclaims that “Ireland simply has too many politicians for its size”, that we must “question the very relevance of a second chamber”, and that modern Ireland cannot be governed effectively by “a political system originally designed for 19th century Britain”.
Eighty years ago the Blueshirt duce Eoin O’Duffy called for “changes in the parliamentary system which will bring the constitution of the State into closer harmony with national needs” (July 20th, 1933). A year later, on July 4th, 1934, that same first president of Fine Gael demanded to know: “What country in the world today had stood by the parliamentary system? Not one country except John Bull. It is gone all over Europe. ”
Unlike his predecessor as Fine Gael Party Leader, Eoin O’Duffy, or his predecessor as taoiseach, John A Costello, we should take comfort in the fact that Enda Kenny has never been a fascist, that it is only one parliamentary chamber he proposes to kill off, and that when history tends to repeat itself, it is usually as farce. But, with all the deep-rooted problems facing Ireland at the moment, should not the electorate treat this Fine Gael circus of constitutional convulsion with the contempt it deserves – as a distracting, self-indulgent farce which we should not be asked to stomach? – Yours, etc,
MANUS O’RIORDAN,
Finglas Road, Dublin 11.
Sir, – Should the Seanad be abolished? No need. Much TV footage of the Dáil proceedings shows many empty seats – could they not all sit together? – Yours, etc,
JOSEPH E MASON,
Merrion Court,
Montenotte, Cork.
A chara , – The Seanad – like a wilting wallflower in the ballroom of democracy hears the strains of the last waltz and with more hope than conviction endeavours to convince us it still has the panache to sweep us off our feet. But, alas, I hear the fat lady sing . . . . – Is mise,
PATRICIA MULKEEN,
Ballinfull, Sligo.
A chara, – The Government is espousing an argument that populous countries need a bicameral legislature, while we small countries can make do with a unicameral system. Does the Government have a formula to equate population size to a state’s entitlement to democratic structures? Will you publish it if they do? – Is mise le meas,
EAMONN LANNOYE,
Brookville Park,
Blackrock, Co Dublin.
Sir, – The old Romans gave the subjects circuses. Are referendums the new distraction for the Irish people – keep their minds off the incompetence of the government and the ineffectiveness of the dáil? (Small case g & d intended!). – Is mise,
CAL HYLAND,
Closheen Lane,
Rosscarbery, Co Cork.
Sir, – Enda Kenny, Fine Gael leader, is insisting the other 75 TDs in the party follow the party whip by publicly supporting the abolition of the An Seanad.
This imposing of the party whip nicely demonstrates the complete lack of democracy which the current Dáil and party whip system impose. If ever a case for reform of the Dáil, rather than abolition of An Seanad, was presented, this is surely it.
Abolition of An Seanad seems to be the brainchild of one man, Enda Kenny, who completely surprised his fellow party members when he came out with it. Now he expects his fellow Fine Gael TDs to show him unquestioning loyalty and support his solo run.
It was unquestioning “loyalty” to the party and party leader which helped cause the Celtic bubble and subsequent disastrous recession. All TDs should remind themselves of that. While it might be embarrassing for Mr Kenny if his brainchild isn’t supported by fellow party members, the world won’t end.
Reform of An Seanad is a good idea: to restore it to its proper purpose, whereby specialists in a particular field can use their expertise to refine and improve the rough draft of law that arrives from the Dáil. The intelligent open debate, unhindered by party politics, allowed in An Seanad can often be a breath of fresh air and more productive than the vitriol spat out in the Dáil. – Yours, etc,
DAVID DORAN,
Royal Oak Road,
Bagenalstown, Co Carlow.
Sir, – To be fair we should all acknowledge that the Seanad has given us such people as Mary Robinson, Donie Cassidy, Christy Kirwan and David Norris. – Yours, etc,
BRENDAN CASSERLY,
Waterfall, Near Cork.
Sir, – The  high degree of enthusiasm among present and past senators for reform of the Seanad may not convince the electorate that it is an instution worth saving but it should certainly convince them  of the truth of Dr Johnson’s statement, “Depend upon it, Sir, when a man knows that he is to be hanged in a fortnight, it concentrates his mind wonderfully.” – Yours, etc,
DENIS O’DONOGHUE,
Countess Grove,
Killarney, Co Kerry.

A chara, – Conall McDevitt MLA (June 6th) sought to morally exculpate the SDLP from his party’s calculated decision this week to rubber-stamp the passage of anti-Agreement unionist Jim Allister’s Civil Service (Special Advisers) Bill through the North’s power-sharing Assembly.
The Irish Times Editorial (June 5th) was accurate in observing that the SDLP have done themselves, and the 1998 Belfast Agreement, significant damage.
Mr Allister’s Bill is an affront to the agreement, to its essence, its values, its terms, its conditions and, not least, its ground-breaking equality and human rights agenda under constitutional and public international law.
It is a matter of historical record that when the conflict erupted in August 1969, shortly before they founded the SDLP, senior nationalist politicians like Paddy O’Hanlon and Paddy Devlin came to Dublin pleading publicly and privately for weapons to defend their community against wholesale pogroms by unionist mobs and state forces.
By its actions this week, the SDLP has now hypocritically singled out for immediate redundancy a political ex-prisoner currently employed as special adviser to Deputy First Minister Martin McGuinness, who, as a teenager, had personally suffered those very pogroms on his own streets in west Belfast before becoming involved in the armed conflict raging around him.
It is also a matter of record that, throughout the past 15 years since the agreement, republicans and political ex-prisoners have repeatedly served as special advisers to executive ministers – including when Seamus Mallon and Mark Durkan were respectively the deputy first minister.
Only now, at Mr Allister’s behest, has the SDLP leadership suddenly decided to support an exclusion agenda despite facing significant internal opposition in its own Assembly group.
The reality is that Mr McDevitt could have made a difference this week by taking a stand for human rights and the agreement, and voting for equality and inclusion through signing a Sinn Féin Petition of Concern. This petition would simply have ensured the agreement’s power-sharing voting mechanism was triggered, taking weighted account of cross-community opinion. That is the essence of power-sharing which the SDLP has now thrown on the scrap-heap.
Instead, on this occasion, the SDLP tried to cynically damage Sinn Féin by disgracefully abusing the rights and needs of selective victims, and by introducing a new “pecking order” of supposed deserving and less-deserving victims.
Yet, in so doing, the SDLP has merely ensured that political ex-prisoners will face even greater institutionalised exclusion and discrimination than at any stage since the agreement.
It is to the SDLP’s shame, and long-term detriment, that not one MLA had the courage to support the basic checks and balances of the agreement in order to protect its long-term values of inclusion and equality. – Is mise,
DAITHI McKAY MLA,
Sinn Féin North Antrim
Constituency Office,

Sir, – In the sunny Leaving Cert days it is heartwarming to see the benefits of the Irish educational system. Where once we had brain-dead, self-consumed graffiti vandals (whose best efforts might possibly rise to “Pozzer is a woz” on several flyovers), we now have individuals who can actually spell the words “supremacy”, “destruction” and “indigenous” and spray them on the walls of a derelict rogue-bank property (Home News, June 6th). They might even spell “xenophobia”, I imagine, before realising that “accommodation” is a better term.
Whatever these spoilers of morals and walls hope to achieve, I don’t think it will be a question of “Banksy, eat your heart out”. – Yours, etc,
EAMON SWEENEY,
South Hill,
Dartry, Dublin 6.
Sir, – Carol Coulter’s article (Opinion, June 7th), while rightly calling for the need for minimum standards for anyone providing care to children or older people, displays a serious misunderstanding of the regulatory issues affecting the private providers of health care by blaming the motivation of providers. Regulation is needed for all providers of care be it HSE, not-for-profit or for-profit providers.
Poor care is not caused by the profit motivation or otherwise of providers, but rather by poor management, training and lack of oversight. In the home care sector, this week Pamela Duncan highlighted in this paper (June 4th & 5th) the impact of the lack of inspections in 80 complaints made about the HSE’s home help service in 2012. Home help provision is provided entirely by the HSE, or HSE-funded non-for-profit organisations. The private sector is not eligible to tender for home help care provision.
An exposé by Prime Time in November 2010 found poor practices in the delivery of care. Half the programme was dedicated to a not-for-profit provider, based out of a HSE health centre. A follow-up Prime Time programme in April 2012, focused on two not-for-profit care providers. A recent Home and Community Care Ireland report highlighted that nearly one third of the HSE budget spent on not-for-profit providers is compromised by some form of investigation into the providers.
It is clear that in the Irish home care sector the profit motivation or otherwise of providers is not a determinant of whether issues exist with the provision of care.
Home and Community Care Ireland, an association of private providers, was the first to call for regulation of home care in 2006. Standards enshrined in legislation are needed, and the supervision of these standards should be done independently by a body such as Hiqa. – Yours, etc,
MICHAEL HARTY,

Sir, – I note the recent statement from the bishops of 11 countries, including those of Ireland, urging the G8 leaders to clamp down on tax avoidance, stating in uncharacteristically clear terms that “It is a moral obligation for citizens to pay their fair share of taxes for the common good”.
As the second-richest asset-owner in the country after the state itself, a miraculous condition reached without the burden of the taxation that afflicts the rest of us, perhaps the church and the religious orders might like to practise the “moral obligation” they preach to others? – Yours, etc,
ROBIN HILLIARD,
Westland Square,

   
Sir, – Bord Bia should be congratulated for its excellent work with the new “Origin Green” campaign, fronted by Saoirse Ronan, celebrating the fact that “we are known for the food and drink that we make in harmony with nature” and that “we are natural and we can prove it . . . come see us we are open for inspection”.
Bold claims and a fabulous vision, but somebody obviously forgot to send Teagasc the memo . . . as it implements its plan in the next two to three weeks to plant genetically modified potatoes in open ground.
There may be GM food in the chain here, but to openly plant GM crops seems to go against everything that could have made us different, unique and offered that premium which Bord Bia is celebrating as its platform for growth. – Yours, etc,
URSULA BUDD

Irish Independent:
It would also strengthen his hand if he were to finally do something about the political expenses gravy train – at local, national and EU level – to ensure that, firstly, no elected representative is able to retain ownership of an asset paid for by the taxpayer via expenses, be it a ministerial car, a second home or a local office. And, secondly, that every single cent claimed is based on a receipt that is published.
Also in this section
‘Prime Time’ pitting young against old
Best of luck to all Leaving Cert pupils
The enemy within
It would also strengthen his hand if he were to finally do something about the political expenses gravy train – at local, national and EU level – to ensure that, firstly, no elected representative is able to retain ownership of an asset paid for by the taxpayer via expenses, be it a ministerial car, a second home or a local office. And, secondly, that every single cent claimed is based on a receipt that is published.
He doesn’t need to reinvent the wheel, he can just copy how it’s done in other countries like Sweden.
One tiny reform that would make a real difference, which Mr Kenny could do at the stroke of a pen, would be to remove the requirement for the public to obtain ‘permission’ from a TD or senator before they can visit the Dail.
You can walk in off the street to watch proceedings in parliaments in Westminster and Washington DC, and many others with far higher security risks than ours, so I don’t see what’s so special about our own Dail that the same access can’t be applied to Leinster House.
After all, when it was owned and lived in by the FitzGeralds, it was specifically designed to be open to anyone who called to visit.
Desmond FitzGerald
Canary Wharf, London
SEANAD SHAKE-UP
* The proposed summary lynching of Seanad Eireann sums up in one higgledy-piggledy stroke package (and red herring) all that is wrong with this barely 20th (sic) Century Government. As an obsessive former candidate and twice successfully elected – if briefly, but not brief – member, I know what is questionable about the Seanad and its electoral system – and what could be done with it in our current crisis to make it very useful indeed.
Instead of wringing the poor old thing’s neck, if we had a Government that was serious about a new kind of politics and new style of governance, it would set about making the Seanad function as fully as it could. And, incidentally, impress us with the Cabinet’s pragmatism and fitness for purpose.
One small starter: the Government screams that the Seanad is elitist. They forget (or do not know, let alone care) that every person who has the right to elect senators is either a citizen or is an elected representative whose right or duty to participate in Seanad elections (or nominations) is enshrined in legislation.
For example, the number of those entitled to vote in each of the university ‘constituencies’ is the equivalent of the electorate of a Dail constituency. A three-seat Dail constituency in the case of TCD. A five-seater in the case of NUI. When we vote for county councillors, we depute them to vote for us in the Seanad elections. It’s in the legislation!
We citizens actually have it in our power to increase the practicality of the Seanad – and free the Dail to address serious matters seriously.
The Labour Parliamentary Party will not see this as its last possible chance to break with this Government. However, events and future historians will concur with that analysis. As will the grubby old voters and their stubby old pencil stumps.
Maurice O’Connell
(Seanad Eireann 1981-1982, 1982-1983)
Tralee, Co Kerry
SING ON, LINDA
* This letter is not about the merits or otherwise of Linda Martin’s version of Daft Punk’s ‘Get Lucky’. It’s about my increasing horror at the level of latent ageism in Irish society.
Some of the criticism of Linda for her appearance on RTE’s ‘Saturday Night Show’ has been deeply offensive and, frankly, neanderthal.
The message from some is that she should basically be hiding away because she is over 60 and daring to still look sexy and glamorous. I thought that type of stuff had been consigned to history, but clearly not.
Some of the world’s greatest artists and high-profile people are not just in their 60s but in their 70s and 80s, and if Linda wants to keep looking good and having fun, how dare others criticise her.
The ageist elements in our society are effectively saying she cannot sing what she chooses. Well, I say ‘no way’; this is a dangerous precedent to set in an increasingly ageing society where people will be working and living fuller lives well into their 80s.
Daniel Lindon
Dublin 11
STATE EXAM SUCCESS
* David McWilliams (Irish Independent, June 5) disparagingly says that our state exams are “a massive national exercise in short-term memory retention”.
Elementary insight into memory tells us that “retention” just happens. What demands massive exercise is retrieval from memory stores. State exams test retrieval.
Success demands massive retrieval across a wide range of knowledge, and only a small percentage self-train well enough to succeed. They go on to be top achievers in adulthood.
Far from it being at the expense of creative adult thinking, that success is its basis. Such thinking depends on accurate retrieval of information.
Efficient Junior and Leaving Cert study is brilliant preparation for adulthood. Wise parents prioritise it, knowing that activities in addition, such as intensive CoderDojo training, can equip young and older adults with IT expertise for work purposes.
Joe Foyle
Ranelagh, Dublin 6
AESOP’S FABLES
* For some reason or other, the words of one of Aesop’s Fables from about 2,500 years ago have come to mind. “We hang the petty thieves and appoint the great ones to public office.”
Apparently it’s only the technology that ever changes.
Dick Barton
Tinahely, Co Wicklow
POLITICAL SHAMBLES
* The sure and certain lack of intellect in the Government would be laughable if it was not so serious. The sole vision of the so-called “inner Cabinet” is how to kick the financial can down the road.
Further proof of the inability of this Government to even consider the long-term effect of policies is the inane idea that reducing interest on post office savings accounts, attacking credit unions and reducing the prizes paid out on Prize Bonds will reverse a frightened economy by compelling people to spend their money.
In fact, these decisions will have the opposite effect, as people become even more afraid of what the future holds for them financially.
The motor trade has come to almost a full stop, while the retail trade, particularly in rural Ireland, is seriously endangered.
The biblical adage about the old order passing is obsolete in FG and Labour as they reside in an old, male, visionless mindset that stymies investment and creation of much-needed jobs.
And for all of you who consider selling state utilities, think again. Here in the state of Victoria in 1991, the incoming government sold off all utilities under the guise of reducing debt.
Today, the state government has less income and utility costs are higher than ever.
Declan Foley
Victoria, Australia
Irish Independent


Still gardening

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9 June 2013 Still Gardening

Off around the park listening to the Navy Lark, oh dear oh dear. There is a new Wren while Heather has gone away on leave. Heaver gave her five pages od description of Leslie boiling down to Lovable Nit. Meanwhile Pertwee and Fatso are also off on leave staying with Fatso’s mum Min. Priceless.
Another quiet day awfully tired get a little more gardening done book trip to Edinburgh.
We watch The Pallaisers The rise and rise of Mr Finn MP
Mary wins at scrabble but she gets under 400 perhaps I can have my revenge tomorrow.

Obituary:

Jack Vance
Jack Vance, who has died aged 96, was a highly prolific and successful writer of pulp fiction during what fans later identified as the Golden Age of science fiction, and was described, by the New York Times magazine, as “one of American literature’s most distinctive and undervalued voices”.

Jack Vance Photo: WRITER PICTURES
5:03PM BST 05 Jun 2013
As with others who took their first steps in popular magazines devoted to “scientific romance” – from HP Lovecraft to Philip K Dick – not all of Vance’s prodigious output could serve as an exemplar of the finer points of literary style, nor even of basic competence in plotting; and since he regarded himself above all as a jobbing writer satisfying an audience, he never claimed more.
In fact, Vance was a much more capable artist than most of his contemporaries, and had an enormous influence, particularly in the nebulous area where science fiction and fantasy collide. The “Dying Earth” sequence, which began with a short story in 1950 and expanded into a huge series in which technology collapses as the Sun dies and magic becomes more significant, blurred the lines between the two, while attracting adherents of both traditions.
He was arguably the first post-war writer to rival HG Wells, Jules Verne and Edgar Rice Burroughs in influence; notable authors inspired by his work include Ursula K Le Guin, Michael Moorcock and George RR Martin. The last, whose series A Song of Ice and Fire (currently being televised as Game of Thrones) owes an obvious debt to Vance’s synthesis of science fictional world-building and sword-and-sorcery romance, said: “Dying Earth ranks with [Robert E] Howard’s Hyborian Age and Tolkien’s Middle-Earth as one of the all-time great fantasy settings.”
John Holbrook Vance was born on August 28 1916 in San Francisco, the middle child of five in a well-to-do family. But his father decamped to Mexico when his son was about five, and the family was taken in by Jack’s maternal grandfather, who had a ranch near Oakley, on the delta of the Sacramento River.
In his memoirs, published in 2009, Vance wondered if this rural exile had been “a licence to be taught to read”. If it had, he took full advantage, becoming especially devoted to the work of Jeffrey Farnol, whose baroque style had an influence on Vance’s own prose. He also developed an obsession with Dixieland jazz, and later took up the ukulele and harmonica with great enthusiasm.
But while he was at junior college his grandfather died, and Jack was obliged to take a series of jobs, first as a bellhop and then working at a cannery and operating a gold dredge (the huge machines which sifted silt from small particles of gold).
He eventually returned to university, at Berkeley, but found it hard to settle, studying Mining Engineering, Physics, English Literature and journalism before leaving to enrol in the US Navy. He quit his job as an electrician at Pearl Harbor a month before the Japanese attack on the base, and graduated in 1942.
Vance’s poor eyesight meant that he was ineligible for active service, but, after abortive spells as a rigger in shipyards and vainly trying to learn Japanese for the OSS, he memorised an optician’s chart and found employment in the Merchant Navy, where he was twice torpedoed, and wrote his first story, published by Thrilling Wonder Stories.
After the war he married Norma Ingold and began submitting work to pulp magazines. For several years (as John Holbrook) he concentrated on mystery stories, and was eventually commissioned to write three serials under the portmanteau pseudonym Ellery Queen. But he also produced stories featuring Magnus Ridolph, an interstellar adventurer , which produced his first lucrative sale when they were optioned by Twentieth Century Fox. The studio also took him on as a scriptwriter for the Captain Video television series.
For much of the 1950s and 1960s, Vance ploughed away for the pulp market without significant recognition . But when his stories set on a far-future Earth, in which science has been replaced by magic, were brought together in (often garishly illustrated) book form, he began to win an audience for his brand of science fantasy.
The Dying Earth (1950) was followed by several other books set in the same universe and featuring Cugel the Clever, including The Eyes of the Overworld (1966), Morreion (1979), Cugel’s Saga (1983) and Rhialto the Marvellous (1984). They influenced not only the blend of science fiction and fantasy produced by authors such as Moorcock and Gene Wolfe, but also the structure of the Dungeons and Dragons games.
Vance also produced, in Big Planet (first published in the 1950s, but in book form in 1978) what the critic John Clute has described as a distinct model for “planetary romance”, in which the appeal rested on world-building and a sophisticated approach.
He won three Hugo awards; the first for his short novel The Dragon Masters (1963) and the last for his memoir This is Me, Jack Vance! (or More Properly, This is “I”) (2009). The Last Castle (1966) managed the rare trick of also winning the Nebula Award. He received a World Fantasy Award for lifetime achievement in 1984 and was inducted into the Science Fiction Hall of Fame in 2001.
His wife, whom he always credited as a major contributor to his work, died in 2008.
Jack Vance, born August 28 1916, died May 26 2013

Guardian:

Your story showing the rise of the super-rich, while those on low and middle incomes see their living standards squeezed, was a powerful reminder of the growth of economic inequality in the UK (“Super-rich on rise as number of £1m-plus earners doubles”, News).
I would question the use of the phrase: “18,000 people now earn at least £1m”. Words such as “earn” and “earners” suggest that these incomes are deserved. Numerous polls tell us that most people think the average full-time worker is worth rather more than 2.6% (£26,000) of someone paid £1m; that such a gap is far beyond what would reasonably reflect differences in effort and talent. The Observer has shown great leadership in highlighting the damaging effects of economic inequality. Can I suggest it takes a similar lead on the language of inequality? The UK has some of the starkest pay gaps in the developed world and we should not talk in a way that suggests this situation reflects “due deserts”.
Duncan Exley
Director, Equality Trust
London SE1
EU not the fishermen’s friend
Will Hutton is right that it’s surprising the EU fisheries deal wasn’t more widely reported (“At last, a deal is done on fishing – proof the European project works”, Comment). However, he is too kind to the EU.
The EU created the overfishing crisis by subsidising the Spanish and Portuguese “fishing factories”. Also, the deal applies only to European waters. The EU has used its economic power to force governments in Africa and Asia to give European fishing fleets access to their coastal waters, destroying the livelihoods of fishermen and the food supplies of coastal peoples. Britain, by its contribution to the EU budget, is forced to subsidise this looting of developing countries’ vital resources.
John Wilson
London NW3
Transsexual and proud
Congratulations for giving a serious voice to a transsexual who so eloquently has highlighted the difficulties all trans people face and the fact that some parts of society are accepting and can be very supportive (“If the RAF can accept my gender transition, why can’t the media?”, Focus). At long last, we are being able to put out the message that we wish only to be judged by the kind of person we are and not by outward appearances, to have respect and live as full participants in our communities.
I am a 77-year-old-male cross-dresser who came out two years ago and moved to my new home in Birmingham last August. The support, acceptance and kindness shown to me have been very moving. I have been very open and always willing to discuss my situation with people in order to widen public perceptions. Sadly, there is still a great deal of bigotry. Much more needs to be done to bring more employers to the admirable position of the RAF.
David Hawley
Birmingham
Germany is not a paradise
Although your article on Germany was well written and accurate, it failed to mention some of the serious problems there (“So how did Germany become the new champion of Europe?” Focus).
One in eight Germans is living in poverty and one in six is threatened by poverty, according to a recent government study. For the first time, Germans are talking of an underclass. There is no minimum wage in Germany. There are serious problems in the education system. Violence in big cities has become a serious problem. Care for the elderly has come in for severe criticism. Some banks are in difficulty because of irresponsible lending to Greece and Spain.
Germany is a good country in which to live but is not without its problems.
Eddie Ross
Colchester
It’s all just a load of ballots
You quote “Westminster’s lack of efficacy and accountability” and “democratic drift” in your leading article (“Party politics needs mending – and quickly”, editorial). Surely, better than the “direct democracy”, which you also cite, would be a proper electoral system. The reason why most people don’t go to the polls is that their vote will have no bearing on the outcome. Meanwhile, politicians conduct a cynical game masquerading as a democratic election. It is to the credit of our population that they treat this process with the contempt it deserves.
Anthony Cosgrave
Totnes, Devon
Play fair? I’ll just take Mayfair
As an NHS psychotherapist, I can see the rationale for Barbara Ellen’s fears about families playing Monopoly in strict accordance with the rules (“A game changer? Well, I wouldn’t put money on it”). However, as a highly competitive game-player – notoriously so among family and friends – and a communist and feminist politically, I recall no greater joy than thrashing my siblings in day-long sessions of Monopoly during school holidays. This despite long-held anti-capitalist sentiments formed during teenage years of revolutionary consciousness.
Rachel Strange
Sheffield

To place Andy Burnham and his Labour crew back in charge of the NHS would be akin to appointing Tony Blair peace envoy to Iraq (“A&E crisis leads to surge in cancelled operations”, News).
Labour took hundreds of millions of pounds that should have been used for fortifying our health services and stuffed it into the pockets of what are now the richest doctors in Europe. Not surprisingly, a lot of them preferred to work a lot less while still being well paid and the out-of-hours service (in many hospitals as well as GPs) became a sick joke.
The last Labour government removed any semblance of responsibility for NHS coalface achievement from government by creating a gross pretence of “local accountability” through trust boards that were neither local nor accountable. It was Labour that destroyed the country’s community health council network. They replaced this with a “care quality commission” that was so under-resourced and poorly managed that it could do its own job with neither care nor quality.
It was Labour that wasted billions on private finance initiatives within the NHS while at the same time forcing NHS trusts to privatise a percentage of their work, even when, in some cases, no patients were treated at all.
Tony Dawson
Southport
As a GP, I often hear complaints from my patients that their surgery has been postponed. Secretary of state for health Jeremy Hunt already has found someone to blame: it must be the GP who is no longer available 24/7. Quite unimaginative, and absolutely untouched by any knowledge of the workings of the NHS and medical practice. I would like to put a few questions to Mr Hunt.
If a human being is so ill that he or she needs to be admitted to hospital urgently, how can the GP act any differently from the casualty officer? On the contrary, in A&E there is the possibility of a few basic tests to determine whether the patient is really as ill as it seems, an option not open to a GP, neither in the surgery nor on a home visit.
If a patient is sent to a ward, then that is probably because the medical officer saw this as the appropriate thing to do. If a patient is sent inappropriately to a ward, why would he or she have to stay? Perhaps it is because this person cannot just be sent home either? And if patients stay in hospital because there is nowhere else for them to go, what does Mr Hunt intend to do about that?
Could it be the cuts in funding for social care that lead to a number of people being sent to hospital because they cannot stay at home safely? Could it be the targets that demand that anyone attending A&E has to be either admitted to a ward or sent home within four hours that are responsible for an increase in admissions? Could it be the relentless pressure on GPs not to refer patients to a specialist in order to save money that has led to an increase in patients reaching a crisis where emergency admission is the only course of action left?
Mr Hunt may argue that these problems stem from policies brought in by the previous government, and he would have a valid point. But his party has been in power for three years and that excuse is wearing very thin.
Michael Meinen
Newcastle upon Tyne
I was struck by how Jeremy Hunt has accused Labour of causing the crisis by “allowing GPs to opt out of offering out-of-hours care”. Previously, he had “blamed doctors’ contracts … allowing GPs to opt out of offering out-of-hours services”.
I suppose it is easier to get away with blaming a previous government than the GPs themselves. Still, I look forward to a decade or so hence when a future education secretary blames the current government for “allowing” schools to become academies. I wonder, will headteachers be blamed first?
Ingrid Warren
Oxford

Independent:

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It is all very well for John Rentoul to state that “Miliband dare not duck an EU referendum” (2 June), but there are palpable reasons why all serious parties should oppose one. In the midst of the politicking, no one appears to focus on the evident truth that no referendum ever answers the question put.
More than anything the voters are influenced by their current view of the government in office. The narrow loss of the May 2005 referendum in France was shown to be down to the low standing of the Chirac government, rather than to a rejection of the European constitution.
Voters always say they want a referendum but they do not vote in them. Every British referendum has had a lower turnout than at the corresponding general election. The risk is the further undermining of parliamentary democracy. It is salutary that Hitler held no election after coming into office in 1933 but governed by plebiscite.
Michael Meadowcroft
Leeds
Why do we need lobbyists at all? (“Lobbying scandal grows as peers are snared”, 2 June). Their very existence suggests that, for money, they can open doors to the corridors of power that are closed to the ordinary citizen.
But any individual or organisation has access to Parliament. They can write to their MP or attend their surgery, and they can also write to the appropriate minister or secretary of state to present their case.
Malcolm Morrison
Swindon, Wiltshire
A register of lobbyists is not nearly enough for the arms trade. Given the financing of relentless lobbying by obscenely wealthy arms makers, there must be a register of every meeting between cabinet ministers and arms lobbyists. And the Government must commit to the same number of meetings with representatives of the millions of citizens who object to their wealth being spent supporting the merchants of death. Vince Cable should be held to account for the appalling bias of his exports department.
Jim McCluskey
Twickenham, Middlesex
Several years ago I persuaded my husband not to cut the lawn until the end of July (“Let our verges run wild”, 2 June). Now, beginning with snowdrops, our glorious garden progresses through exquisite, ghostly crocii, daffodils, fritillaries, primroses, cowslips, bluebells, speedwells, forget-me-nots, violets, viper’s bugloss, common daisies and sun-gold dandelions to, last week, a riot of buttercups, ragged robin, fraises des bois and ox-eye daisies. The ragwort (with its cinnabar moth caterpillars) will surely follow. As will delicious, tiny strawberries. All of you who think nothing beats a tidy lawn, consider what you’re missing!
Sara Neill
Tunbridge Wells, Kent
Alan Mitcham blames “farming practices” for the loss of habitat, but it is overpopulation that is at fault and the resulting increase in cars on the road (Letters, 2 June). To those who want the right to have more and more children, I say, what about my right to walk in the countryside, and what about the rights of tigers and polar bears to have a home?
Sue Crossley
Via email
The Vatican has collected so many artefacts and paintings over the centuries, and it is still willing to pay vast sums for contemporary art (“Vatican to pour millions into new churches”, 2 June). This is exactly how the Catholic Church lost its way; it became a financial institution instead of a religious one. Spirituality has nothing to do with fancy cathedrals and financial wealth, and, if he did exist, Jesus was perfectly clear on that.
Emilie Lamplough
Trowbridge, Wiltshire
Earlier this year, Didcot power station, which covered 300 acres, and provided power for two million homes, was closed (“Clean power is good…”, 2 June). What acreage would be required for a wind farm of similar output? Is there any way excess output can be stored, ready for when there is no wind, or demand is high? Or should we stop wasting money on green-lobby ideas and put it into nuclear power? Sixty years ago, we were leaders in this technology; now we are a long way behind and will have to buy it in.
Adam Abbott
Swindon, Wiltshire

Times:

‘Mystery shopper’ could catch out slippery lords
IT IS strange to think that any person who has been elected to parliament or elevated to the House of Lords would, knowing that they were being “set up” and make claims that could expose them and our politicians to further ridicule (“Cash for access: Lords exposed”, “‘Getting to see ministers is part of the package’”, News, and “High time to clean up the House of Lords”, Editorial, last week)?
Rather than whips emailing their MPs and peers to warn them to be careful and not get caught, should not the whips’ office (or indeed the parliamentary commissioner for standards) conduct a programme of mystery shopping to identify, expose and weed out all such politicians from public life?
Alistair Nicoll, Sheffield

Clean-up needed
The Sunday Times has achieved quite a feat of investigative journalism, but there is a case for a further clean-up of the whole parliament, not just of the House of Lords, since in the past week we have had a Conservative MP who has resigned the party whip.
Dr Nigel Paterson, Southampton

Councils are better run
It is apposite to compare the standards regime for lords and MPs with the far stricter and more transparent regime in local government. Councillors cannot lobby for any organisation from which they receive money, and have to declare an interest and withdraw from discussions relating to such an organisation.
This may be a reason why there is far less slipperiness in the local authority world. Unfortunately this regime (while still far stricter than the one in parliament) has been seriously weakened by Eric Pickles’s emasculation of the external standards regime.
George Krawiec, North Thoresby, Lincolnshire

Too many peers
The many attempts to reform the House of Lords have been unsuccessful and most of  those who play an active role are still placemen and women who are affiliated to one or other of the main political parties. The rest appear to  use their membership simply to enjoy the privileges it  gives them.
Membership should be reduced by natural wastage and no new entrants allowed until the number is halved. Eventually all members should be independents, unaffiliated and free from a party whip to vote as they wish on every issue. They should retire at 70.
Kenneth Wood, Exeter, Devon

Little effort required
The sickening reality is, these individuals are very well off. Added to that, they get paid a substantial tax-free allowance for merely attending.
Without a constituency to worry about, very little effort is required of them. The only word to describe this practice is greed. 
Edward O’Brien, Coaley, Gloucestershire

Once bitten, not shy
A sting operation is not incitement. It seems to be the only way the public will ever get to know what’s going on. The really staggering thing is that after previous exposés reporters can still catch the lords this way. This shows it’s nothing out of the ordinary.
David Edwards, Eastbourne, East Sussex

Lessons not learnt
Was nothing learnt from the MPs’ expenses scandal? In the meantime, we need a free press to keep all politicians in check.
Melissa Roy London
A bit rich
It is not as though the lords are short of a bob or two, as most have huge pensions from one or several sources as well as their £300 tax-free daily allowance. 
Sky Rivers, Ewell , Surrey

Carole Middleton is a hard-working, loving mother — why knock her?
I AM no fan of the Middletons, the royals or any form of “Berkshire merc” but is it necessary to be so unpleasant (“HRM — Her Royal Middletonness”, Magazine, last week)?
What did Carole Middleton do? She climbed a social ladder, developed a successful business and raised a family within an emotionally stable environment; she wears a particular uniform of clothes, chooses to be discreet about her daughter’s relationship and does not flirt with the media. Hardly a crime.
Catherine Walker, Milton Keynes

Bright and shrewd
Carole Middleton appears to be a perfectly pleasant woman who is bright enough and sufficiently shrewd to have amassed a great deal of money through business endeavours. She is not royal, so why describe her grandmother as  “a fallen woman” and  mention that she comes from a long line of consumptives and cannon fodder (that is assuming that being either consumptive or cannon fodder is something of which she and her relatives should be ashamed)?
Lindsey Scudder, Watford

Missed opportunity
I am not a fervent royalist but I have great respect for our Queen and was disappointed by the front cover of the magazine on the very day that commemorates the coronation. I love Camilla Long’s incisive writing and regard Carole Middleton as someone who has conducted herself extraordinarily well through difficult times.
Jane Sacks, Rossendale, Lancashire

Queasy reading
Long’s piece struck such a fine balance between rank snobbery and even ranker bitchery that I had to lie down in a darkened room. It was a queasy start to an unusually sunny Sunday.
Emily Fergus, London SW10

Happy families
What happened to the British sense of fair play? The Windsors are blessed to be associated with the Middletons.
Angela Keane, Bushey, Hertfordshire

Tin ear
Many readers are not public school educated. To write an article in your usually top-class magazine on how horrendous Middleton is because of her non-silver-spoon upbringing will do nothing to increase your readership.
Caroline Williams, Cardiff

American dream
In America Carole Middleton would be applauded. 
Katharine Horrocks, Towersey, Oxfordshire

Class action
Leave the woman alone and stop being so classist. Carole too common, Dave too posh — can no one get it right?
Sally England, London W8

Great expectations
I expect so much more of my favourite newspaper.
Diane Mckenzie, By email

Hard work? You can bank on it
Sir Mervyn King says that working as a supply teacher was “the most exhausting job I have ever done in my life” and that he had to lie down when he returned home at five o’clock “to recover from the exertions” (“Those who can, teach. Those who can’t, run the Bank of England”, News, last week).
Had he been a full-time teacher, he would also have had to allow for meetings before and after school, marking and lesson preparation on weekday evenings and at the weekend, completion of time-consuming records and the nerve-racking experience of periodic Ofsted inspections. King will no doubt counsel those fallen bankers who have evinced a desire to relocate into teaching that this is no easy option.
Barry Borman, Edgware, northwest London

For King and country
King was lucky that national service ended five years previously, as he would have found out what exertions really were, with no opportunity for an hour’s sleep to recover either.
John Henesy, Maidenhead, Berkshire

Children’s diets lack vital minerals
I AGREE with many of the issues raised by Camilla Cavendish (“Ban the addictive sugars and fats. Not the poor shopkeepers”, Comment, last week) but surely a causative factor in rising levels of teen obesity and a host of other illnesses is that our kids are suffering deficiencies in key minerals that regulate blood sugar, metabolism and reduce cravings for sweets and fats.
They also suffer from a deficiency of essential fatty acids, which stop cravings for sweets and help provide healthy fats to give energy and support healthy weight management.
The key is surely some sort of basic parental education coupled with a return to the simple, fresh, wholesome diet of our great-grandparents.
James McDonald, Southampton

Chips, lard and lots of exercise
Cavendish made only a passing reference to the benefits of exercise. In the 1940s and 1950s I started each day with porridge and a generous dollop of condensed milk. My diet consisted mainly of bread, butter and jam and chips, which my mother cooked in lard. At 17 I weighed 9st 7lb without an ounce of fat on me because I burnt off the calories chasing balls around football pitches, cricket fields and table tennis tables. By contrast, for the past 30 years, local authorities, egged on by the loons of political correctness and the “all must have prizes” brigade, have sold off thousands of playing fields. 
Tony Hubble, Burntwood, Staffordshire

Oh, sugar
I was diagnosed with type 2 diabetes and advised to avoid foods with added sugar. My glucose readings went very high after just two slices of wholemeal bread from a leading company. Politicians seem to be reluctant to put pressure on the food industry.
Philip G Bell, Redbourn, Hertfordshire

Fowl taste
I tried to buy some cooked chicken from an upmarket food chain recently and found every packet had sugar added, for “taste purposes”.  We wouldn’t add sugar to chicken at home.
Lee Adley, Milton Keynes, Buckinghamshire

Points
A year to remember
Reading “1953 and all that” (Focus, last week) brought back the happiest of memories. At the age of 10, after undergoing two successful brain operations, I was discharged on May 30. Everest had been conquered, the Queen was about to be crowned, the flags fluttered and the lemonade flowed, all for the Queen and for me. Shame they don’t make years like that any more.
Alan Millard, Lee-on-the-Solent, Hampshire

Road cull
A great deal of taxpayers’ money can be saved by not bothering to kill badgers (“We will brock you”, News, last week). Judging by the vast numbers dead by the roadsides in mid-Wales, badgers here are self-culling.
VA Curtis, Llanymawddwy, Powys

It’s a goldmine
Just so I’m clear about your article “Now that’s what I call a palace” (News, last week), the Newbolds buy a house in 1999 for £1.5m, a ridiculously small sum relative to the size of the property because it is in serious need of restoration. They then sue the Coal Authority, ie, us taxpayers, for the money to restore the house. If successful they will turn it into a hotel, spa and conference centre, a privately owned business worth many times their investment. It would seem Prince Charles is of the opinion that in these times of austerity this is a good use of public money and is once again lobbying ministers. Are the Newbolds laughing (at us) all the way to the bank?
John Atkins, Chelmsford, Essex

Face cream
You report the impending demise of the cupcake (“Crumbs! Icing’s on the wall for cupcake craze”, News, last week). Has anybody solved the problem of biting into one without taking a cream and icing bath from chin to hairline?
Becky Goldsmith, London SW11

Artful dodgers
I was dragged to galleries as a child and was bored silly, particularly when I had to queue for hours to see the Mona Lisa (“The kids are all right”, Culture, last week). Most children don’t want to be in the gallery, stand still and talk quietly. I have had numerous visits to galleries disturbed by kids running up and down or babies screaming. Children who are interested in art deserve to be there, but they are the exception. If it were up to me, galleries would have set times where they welcomed children under 12. 
Marcia MacLeod, London NW6

Home truths
Harriet Sergeant (“Couldn’t care less”, Focus, May 19) highlighted the challenges of children’s homes but offered no way forward for those children who cannot live at home and who cannot be fostered or adopted — either because of the shortage of people to take on this task, or the complexities of their needs. The homes are too often staffed by people who have limited or no qualifications. Adopters and foster carers who are willing to take these young people into their homes are few and far between. Residential care is here to stay — we need to make it better by investing in the staff. 
Bridget Robb, The British Association of Social Workers

Corrections and clarifications
Complaints about inaccuracies in all sections of The Sunday Times, including online, should be addressed to editor@sunday-times.co.uk or The Editor, The Sunday Times, 3 Thomas More Square, London E98 1ST. In addition, the Press Complaints Commission (complaints@pcc.org.uk or 020 7831 0022) examines formal complaints about the editorial content of UK newspapers and magazines (and their websites)

Birthdays
Matt Bellamy, Muse front man, 35; Tony Britton, actor, 89; Patricia Cornwell, crime writer, 57; Johnny Depp, actor, 50; Michael J Fox, actor, 52; David Koepp, screenwriter, 50; Iain Lee, comedian, 40; Natalie Portman, actress, 32; Charles Saatchi, advertising executive and art collector, 70; Steve Smith Eccles, jockey, 58; Aaron Sorkin, screenwriter, 52; Charles Webb, author of The Graduate, 74

Anniversaries
1549 first Book of Common Prayer comes into use; 1781 birth of George Stephenson, railway engineer; 1870 Charles Dickens dies; 1873 original Alexandra Palace burns to the ground 16 days after opening in north London; 1891 birth of Cole Porter, songwriter; 1934 screen debut of Donald Duck; 1958 the Queen opens revamped Gatwick airport; 1983 Margaret Thatcher wins second general election

Telegraph:
SIR – On Tuesday I watched Town on BBC2, which featured the large town of Huddersfield in Yorkshire. There was extensive coverage of the town’s football and rugby clubs and also generous mentions for Harold Wilson and why Sir Patrick Stewart returned to his roots after spending well over a decade in America.
There was, however, absolutely no mention at all of one of this country’s greatest film stars, James Mason. Surely, Huddersfield hasn’t forgotten its acting gem, even if the BBC and Nicholas Crane have?
Frederick Reuben Parr
Tyldesley, Lancashire

SIR – As a GP with a family who has worked in the NHS for the past 35 years, I was shocked to read the comments of Anna Soubry, the public health minister, on women doctors (“Female doctors with children strain the NHS, agrees minister”, report, June 6).
I, like many of my colleagues, have dedicated my life to serving my patients, often facing obstruction from successive governments. To have an MP describing female doctors as a “burden” and seeing her comments acknowledged by a minister as “important” is not just insulting, but a display of sexism that is simply not acceptable in this day and age.
What does Anna Soubry propose to do about this “burden”? Prevent women from becoming doctors?
To blame the problems of the NHS on women doctors is simply fantasy and the minister should know better than even to entertain this.
Dr Sharon Bennett
London N5
Related Articles
Has Huddersfield forgotten its great acting gem?
08 Jun 2013
SIR – The response by Dr Clare Gerada, the chairman of the Royal College of General Practitioners (RCGP), and others to Anna Soubry’s comments are as predictable as they are misconceived.
If it costs £100 to train a doctor and he (or she) moves to 50 per cent part time, another doctor needs to be trained, at the cost of a further £100, to work for the other 50 per cent of the time.
Presumably there are continual training costs which need to be borne by each part-time doctor, which would only need to be borne by one full-timer.
Part-time working is fundamentally inefficient, not only in the health service but in any industry where there is a high cost of training and compliance. It’s not very complicated.
It is disappointing that someone as supposedly well-educated as the chairman of the RCGP doesn’t appear to understand these fairly simple economic facts of life.
Paul Goodson
Plaxtol, Kent
SIR – GPs account for one third of the total medical workforce, but undertake more than 90 per cent of all consultations. Looking at my practice’s data, the number of consultations has doubled in the past five years, with an average rate of 66 patients per day per doctor.
If I work only 10 hours a day, I would have nine minutes to see a patient, although I would have to find time within that to use the lavatory, eat and drive between housebound patients.
I would also need to find time for the growing administration relating to patients’ clinical conditions, the local GP consortium, the Department of Health, the Department for Works and Pensions, and the Care Quality Commission.
I do not believe that my practice is an exception, which suggests that many GP practices are endeavouring to provide a service under difficult conditions.
Dr Philip Morgan
Birmingham
Charities’ rights
SIR – Your leading article (“Politicising charity”, June 5) attacks a fundamental pillar of British democracy.
Political campaigning by charitable organisations has been a force for good in our country for centuries, from the Society for the Abolition of the Slave Trade’s petition to parliament in 1787, to the establishment of societies for the prevention of cruelty to children and animals in the Victorian era.
Political advocacy by charities arose from the desire of like-minded people to do all they can for the beneficiaries, communities and causes to which they dedicate themselves. There can be no justification for restricting this ability.
Any restriction on charities’ right to campaign would represent an assault on the principle of freedom of speech. It would also reduce the level of political representation of many vulnerable and under-represented groups in society.
Last but not least, it would undermine one of the fundamental freedoms of British political life: the right of ordinary people to join together in order to seek political change for the public good.
Sir Stephen Bubb
CEO, Association of Chief Executives of Voluntary Organisations
London N1
SIR – The vast majority of charities are run at a local level by unpaid trustees (or directors in the case of charitable companies).
I cannot understand how large charities are allowed to function effectively as businesses, paying their executives generous salaries and employing other firms to encourage people to donate, while enjoying charitable tax advantages.
Why should the hard-pressed taxpayer be expected to fund these expensively run “charities”? It is hardly surprising that such fortunate businesses may lose sight of what charity means.
Angus McPherson
Findon, West Sussex
Cameron on Syria
SIR – Peter Oborne (“Can Cameron explain why he has put us on al-Qaeda’s side?”, Comment, June 6) writes with clarity and sense about the international alignment over the tragedy in Syria and David Cameron’s strange utterances on the matter.
They are indeed a reminder of the simplistic parroting that we heard in the run-up to the invasion of Iraq. If, next, we hear a well-rehearsed chorus of Cabinet ministers speaking daily about our “moral and humanitarian duty to intervene”, we may assume that Mr Cameron has crossed the line into Blairyland.
Mr Oborne knows, I imagine, that the real-world answer to his question is “yes”, and the reasons he would be given are the old ones of oil, arms, financial power and “traditional links” that together make up the West’s “regional interests”.
This is not a position from which we can expect to bring hope to Syrians or the wider region.
Patrick Staines
Evesham, Worcestershire
Tooth-combing Everest
SIR – Before the conquest of Everest I ran the army dental centre at the Cavalry Barracks, Hounslow.
Colonel John Hunt was also stationed there and before their departure he brought several of his expedition team to me for exceptionally close check-ups to avoid high-altitude toothache.
Later I always proudly regarded myself as one of the “conquerors”.
Dr Hans L Eirew
Manchester
Drink driving
SIR – In 2011, David Cameron commendably vowed to “tackle the menace of drug-drivers”, referring to illegal substances. He should note that only one drug causes 10,000 road casualties a year in Britain: alcohol.
By Christmas, Wetherspoons will be serving pints at motorway services (“Next exit for motorway services and pubs”, Business, June 4), in a taste of things to come as the Government seeks to erode licensing regulations on the country’s favourite legal drug.
Deep within the Government’s own impact assessment for allowing motorway sales is mention of a 2008 Highways Agency study which found that more drivers in motorway accidents were over the limit when nearby services serve alcohol. Reasons for the new policy draw “no clear conclusions” from this and focus instead on the foretold £2.4 million a year in increased profits.
Scientists see inconclusive evidence as a sign to stop and collect more, not as a green light to speed on past while drink-driving leaves approximately five lifeless bodies a week on our highways.
Professor David Nutt
Chairman, Independent Scientific Committee on Drugs
London SW8
Servicemen teachers
SIR – A similar scheme post-1945 to that proposed for ex-servicemen (“Fast track into teaching for ex-members of Armed Forces”, report, June 7) saw disciplined, enthusiastic and fit young men making a magnificent contribution not just to the classroom, but to the sporting life of primary and secondary schools country-wide.
With more thought, the Government could use today’s equivalent to work in conjunction with the Forestry Commission, National Parks and councils in schemes to get young unemployed people into the countryside, in order to work for their benefits in projects of value to the national environment.
Cmdr Alan York, RN (retd)
Sheffield
Man in the mirror
SIR – I am 67 going on 68 and spend most of my week in jeans, and I care not what I look like. If it is painful for others to observe me then they can do what I do when I pass a mirror – avert one’s gaze.
Colin Wilkinson
Aughton, Lancashire
The production systems of pick-your-own farms
SIR – I find it incredible that Victoria Moore (Features, June 4) can consider that it was ever permissible for pick-your-own customers to “eat their body weight in berries before taking a couple of punnets to be weighed at the cash desk”.
Eating without paying is surely stealing and an insult to the many hard-working fruit growers whom I have had the privilege of helping during my 35 years as an independent horticultural consultant.
These growers have invested considerable time and capital in modern production methods – being the innovators of table-top systems to ease picking, and quick to adopt a range of new varieties to provide customers with high-quality fruit.
To lose this fruit to a minority who fill themselves with free strawberries must be demoralising and heartbreaking.
George Ellis
Pershore, Worcestershire
SIR – The presumption that pick-your-own farms (PYOs) are not using the most up-to-date varieties of fruit and production methods is both misleading and inaccurate.
PYOs often offer the most modern varieties alongside some of the older and more distinctive ones. I speak from my own experience in running a PYO. Our priority in the production method is flavour, unlike the producers in your article whose primary concern is shelf life.
A lot of this is achieved through the nutrients we feed the plants. Calcium helps firm the fruit, whereas potassium enhances the flavour. On a PYO production system, we feed considerably less calcium and more potassium, thus focusing on flavour and not a firm, crunchy fruit.
Matthew Grindal
Lutterworth, Leicestershire

Irish Times:

Sir, – I graduated from the National University of Ireland in 1973, which entitled me to a vote in Seanad elections. I have never exercised that entitlement because I never believed senators should be elected by a privileged minority who were given votes because of schooling or political position.
How anyone can argue for the retention of an elitist, undemocratic institution is beyond me.
If the Seanad is to be retained – and I don’t believe it should be – let everyone who is on the electoral register have a vote and let Seanad elections be held on the same day as Dáil elections, thus putting an end to the practice of using it as a step up to or down from the Dáil. – Yours, etc,
JOHN MacKENNA,
Muine Bheag, Co Carlow.
Sir, – In opening his campaign to kill off An Seanad, the Taoiseach Enda Kenny demagogically proclaims that “Ireland simply has too many politicians for its size”, that we must “question the very relevance of a second chamber”, and that modern Ireland cannot be governed effectively by “a political system originally designed for 19th century Britain”.
Eighty years ago the Blueshirt duce Eoin O’Duffy called for “changes in the parliamentary system which will bring the constitution of the State into closer harmony with national needs” (July 20th, 1933). A year later, on July 4th, 1934, that same first president of Fine Gael demanded to know: “What country in the world today had stood by the parliamentary system? Not one country except John Bull. It is gone all over Europe. ”
Unlike his predecessor as Fine Gael Party Leader, Eoin O’Duffy, or his predecessor as taoiseach, John A Costello, we should take comfort in the fact that Enda Kenny has never been a fascist, that it is only one parliamentary chamber he proposes to kill off, and that when history tends to repeat itself, it is usually as farce. But, with all the deep-rooted problems facing Ireland at the moment, should not the electorate treat this Fine Gael circus of constitutional convulsion with the contempt it deserves – as a distracting, self-indulgent farce which we should not be asked to stomach? – Yours, etc,
MANUS O’RIORDAN,
Finglas Road, Dublin 11.
Sir, – Should the Seanad be abolished? No need. Much TV footage of the Dáil proceedings shows many empty seats – could they not all sit together? – Yours, etc,
JOSEPH E MASON,
Merrion Court,

) sought to morally exculpate the SDLP from his party’s calculated decision this week to rubber-stamp the passage of anti-Agreement unionist Jim Allister’s Civil Service (Special Advisers) Bill through the North’s power-sharing Assembly.
The Irish Times Editorial (June 5th) was accurate in observing that the SDLP have done themselves, and the 1998 Belfast Agreement, significant damage.
Mr Allister’s Bill is an affront to the agreement, to its essence, its values, its terms, its conditions and, not least, its ground-breaking equality and human rights agenda under constitutional and public international law.
It is a matter of historical record that when the conflict erupted in August 1969, shortly before they founded the SDLP, senior nationalist politicians like Paddy O’Hanlon and Paddy Devlin came to Dublin pleading publicly and privately for weapons to defend their community against wholesale pogroms by unionist mobs and state forces.
By its actions this week, the SDLP has now hypocritically singled out for immediate redundancy a political ex-prisoner currently employed as special adviser to Deputy First Minister Martin McGuinness, who, as a teenager, had personally suffered those very pogroms on his own streets in west Belfast before becoming involved in the armed conflict raging around him.
It is also a matter of record that, throughout the past 15 years since the agreement, republicans and political ex-prisoners have repeatedly served as special advisers to executive ministers – including when Seamus Mallon and Mark Durkan were respectively the deputy first minister.
Only now, at Mr Allister’s behest, has the SDLP leadership suddenly decided to support an exclusion agenda despite facing significant internal opposition in its own Assembly group.
The reality is that Mr McDevitt could have made a difference this week by taking a stand for human rights and the agreement, and voting for equality and inclusion through signing a Sinn Féin Petition of Concern. This petition would simply have ensured the agreement’s power-sharing voting mechanism was triggered, taking weighted account of cross-community opinion. That is the essence of power-sharing which the SDLP has now thrown on the scrap-heap.
Instead, on this occasion, the SDLP tried to cynically damage Sinn Féin by disgracefully abusing the rights and needs of selective victims, and by introducing a new “pecking order” of supposed deserving and less-deserving victims.
Yet, in so doing, the SDLP has merely ensured that political ex-prisoners will face even greater institutionalised exclusion and discrimination than at any stage since the agreement.
It is to the SDLP’s shame, and long-term detriment, that not one MLA had the courage to support the basic checks and balances of the agreement in order to protect its long-term values of inclusion and equality. – Is mise,
DAITHI McKAY MLA,

Sir, – In the sunny Leaving Cert days it is heartwarming to see the benefits of the Irish educational system. Where once we had brain-dead, self-consumed graffiti vandals (whose best efforts might possibly rise to “Pozzer is a woz” on several flyovers), we now have individuals who can actually spell the words “supremacy”, “destruction” and “indigenous” and spray them on the walls of a derelict rogue-bank property (Home News, June 6th). They might even spell “xenophobia”, I imagine, before realising that “accommodation” is a better term.
Whatever these spoilers of morals and walls hope to achieve, I don’t think it will be a question of “Banksy, eat your heart out”. – Yours, etc,
EAMON SWEENEY,

Sir, – Carol Coulter’s article (Opinion, June 7th), while rightly calling for the need for minimum standards for anyone providing care to children or older people, displays a serious misunderstanding of the regulatory issues affecting the private providers of health care by blaming the motivation of providers. Regulation is needed for all providers of care be it HSE, not-for-profit or for-profit providers.
Poor care is not caused by the profit motivation or otherwise of providers, but rather by poor management, training and lack of oversight. In the home care sector, this week Pamela Duncan highlighted in this paper (June 4th & 5th) the impact of the lack of inspections in 80 complaints made about the HSE’s home help service in 2012. Home help provision is provided entirely by the HSE, or HSE-funded non-for-profit organisations. The private sector is not eligible to tender for home help care provision.
An exposé by Prime Time in November 2010 found poor practices in the delivery of care. Half the programme was dedicated to a not-for-profit provider, based out of a HSE health centre. A follow-up Prime Time programme in April 2012, focused on two not-for-profit care providers. A recent Home and Community Care Ireland report highlighted that nearly one third of the HSE budget spent on not-for-profit providers is compromised by some form of investigation into the providers.
It is clear that in the Irish home care sector the profit motivation or otherwise of providers is not a determinant of whether issues exist with the provision of care.
Home and Community Care Ireland, an association of private providers, was the first to call for regulation of home care in 2006. Standards enshrined in legislation are needed, and the supervision of these standards should be done independently by a body such as Hiqa. – Yours, etc,
MICHAEL HARTY,
Sir, – I note the recent statement from the bishops of 11 countries, including those of Ireland, urging the G8 leaders to clamp down on tax avoidance, stating in uncharacteristically clear terms that “It is a moral obligation for citizens to pay their fair share of taxes for the common good”.
As the second-richest asset-owner in the country after the state itself, a miraculous condition reached without the burden of the taxation that afflicts the rest of us, perhaps the church and the religious orders might like to practise the “moral obligation” they preach to others? – Yours, etc,
ROBIN HILLIARD,
Sir, – Bord Bia should be congratulated for its excellent work with the new “Origin Green” campaign, fronted by Saoirse Ronan, celebrating the fact that “we are known for the food and drink that we make in harmony with nature” and that “we are natural and we can prove it . . . come see us we are open for inspection”.
Bold claims and a fabulous vision, but somebody obviously forgot to send Teagasc the memo . . . as it implements its plan in the next two to three weeks to plant genetically modified potatoes in open ground.
There may be GM food in the chain here, but to openly plant GM crops seems to go against everything that could have made us different, unique and offered that premium which Bord Bia is celebrating as its platform for growth. – Yours, etc,
URSULA BUDD

Irish Independent:


Still gardening

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10 June 2013 Still in the Garden

Off around the park listening to the Navy Lark, oh dear oh dear. Lady Tod-Hunter Browns stops a ghost ship and Troutbridge is sent off to investigate, but its Nunky a rival smuggling gang hav painted his tug with luminous paint so customs can spot him. Priceless.
Another quiet day awfully tired get a little more gardening done sell a book hurrah!
We watch The Pallaisers The rise and rise of Mr Finn MP
Mary wins at scrabble but she gets under 400 perhaps I can have my revenge tomorrow.

Obituary:

Iain Banks
Iain Banks, who has died aged 59, was a novelist who achieved popularity and critical success in two separate fields: literary fiction, for which he appeared on the first Granta list of young writers beside the likes of Martin Amis, Salman Rushdie and AN Wilson; and, as Iain M Banks, science fiction, much of it set in an interstellar anarcho-communist utopia called The Culture.

Iain Banks, born February 16 1954, died June 9 2013 Photo: Chris Watt
6:00PM BST 09 Jun 2013
Banks came rather to regret this demarcation of his novels, and in truth the distinction was not always straightforward. The grotesque and bizarre were often to the fore in his mainstream books, to the point that it was not always obvious into which category they fell. Indeed, 2009’s Transition was published in Britain as an Iain Banks novel, but under his science fiction byline — with its initial M — in America.
His best-known book probably remained the first he published. The Wasp Factory brought Banks immediate notoriety. Even before its appearance, one publisher claimed that the book had made him vomit into his waste paper basket. It had a similarly emetic effect on many reviewers: “a repulsive piece of work”; “silly, gloatingly sadistic”; “a work of unparalleled depravity” were among the judgments of the newspapers. Many, though, also conceded the hallucinatory brilliance of the author’s imagination, and there was widespread acknowledgement that Banks’ control of tone and language were more assured than that of many established novelists.
Iain Banks was born on February 16 1954 at Dunfermline in Fife and spent his early years in North Queensferry. His father Tom worked for the Admiralty “getting crashed jets out the water”, and his mother Effie, who had been a professional ice skater in a touring review, met her husband while teaching skating at Dunfermline’s ice rink. Though an only child, Iain had a close-knit and large extended family; their name had originally been Banks Menzies, but Iain’s paternal grandfather, a miner and trade union activist, had reversed the surnames after drawing the attention of the police during the General Strike of 1926.
Although registered at birth as plain Iain Banks, he used Menzies as his middle name from childhood. The decision to add “M” for his first science fiction book, Consider Phlebas (the fourth of his novels), was prompted by the disapproval of his uncles and cousins when the initial had been dropped from his previous books — after an editor raised the remarkably unlikely prospect of confusion with Rosie M Banks, the fictional author of slushy romantic novels in PG Wodehouse’s stories.
When Iain was nine, his father was posted to the west coast of Scotland, and the family moved from their home near the Forth Bridge. The boy’s principal childhood interests were television, reading science fiction, and producing homemade explosives from sugar and weedkiller. After Greenock High School, Iain went to the University of Stirling, where he took courses in English, Psychology and Philosophy.
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His father was, he recalled, fairly supportive of his resolve to become a novelist, though his mother hoped he might train as a teacher to have “something to fall back on”. Instead, after graduating, Banks hitch-hiked around Europe, and then took a series of jobs, working for almost a decade (some of it in the south of England) as a dustman, a hospital porter and a clerk, with stints at IBM and British Steel, while steadily devoting himself to his writing. Until his first book appeared, he plastered the walls of his room with rejection slips. His parents became more relaxed about the security of his career, he observed, only after he had bought them a house next door to his own.
After the success of The Wasp Factory in 1984, Banks produced a steady series of books, all of which found a sizeable audience and, for the most part, an appreciative critical response. The excesses of his début, which featured murder, mutilation of animals, insanity and sexual violence, were less evident in his later books, though the defining qualities of Banks’ novels, whether mainstream or genre, remained a macabre black humour and a taste for the bizarre and the Gothic.
Walking on Glass (1985) tied together three stories, one of them science fictional, another the galactic fantasies of a paranoic navvy; the following year’s The Bridge, which Banks described as the most satisfactory and intellectual of his own books, also wove together three separate strands, but with a more explicit emphasis on schizophrenia and delusion. Much of it was set against the background of the Forth Rail Bridge — Banks’ favourite structure, and near to which he chose to live close to after his return to Scotland in 1988.
In 1987 he published Consider Phlebas, the first of the Culture novels; thereafter there was, for a time at least, a clearer distinction between his science fiction output and his more conventional novels, which tended to appear in alternate years. His space operas, which combined political musings, scientific speculation, mordantly funny asides (the names of the artificially intelligent spaceships were a long-running joke), and violent, frequently gruesome action sequences, brought him a new, large and enthusiastic fan base.
Espedair Street (1987) told the story of a reclusive but successful rock musician. Its more discursive style and avoidance of the horrific made it one of Banks’ most accessible books; it was dramatised for radio a decade later. It was followed by The Player of Games, one of the most straightforward of the Culture novels, in which a professional gambler is recruited to destroy an intergalactic empire with a hierarchy built on a complicated (and politically oppressive) game, and, in 1989, by another mainstream novel, Canal Dreams, a thriller featuring a female Japanese musician trapped on a supertanker attacked by terrorists. Use of Weapons (1990) was the third Culture novel.
Banks’ usual practice was to produce a novel a year, taking six months off, letting the plot develop during two or three months of hill-walking, and then writing solidly for three months, keeping office hours. By the turn of the century, print runs for his books were regularly above 200,000, and it was not unusual for him to make £250,000 in a year. In one survey he was voted the fifth-greatest writer Britain had ever produced.
A collection of short stories, including three set in the Culture, appeared in 1991 as The State of the Art (one was later dramatised for radio); the following year he published a darkly comic family saga, The Crow Road, which in 1996 became a Bafta-nominated BBC drama series, starring Peter Capaldi and a young Dougray Scott. It was followed by another science fiction (but non-Culture) novel, Against a Dark Background.
Complicity, also published in 1993, was the tale of a dissolute Scottish journalist and a serial killer. In its exploration of guilt and violence, and the unreliable narration of the chapters dealing with the murderer (told in the second person) it had distinct echoes of James Hogg’s Confessions of a Justified Sinner, which also dwelt on the dualist aspects of Scottish notions of sin and redemption.
Banks often dealt with moral questions, and was particularly drawn to examinations of death and hell (notably in Look to Windward and Surface Detail). Though his mother was a churchgoer, he said that he had “escaped infection by Calvinism”, and was a committed supporter of the National Secular Society and the Humanist Society of Scotland.
Drugs, both real and imaginary — citizens of the Culture could generate mind altering substances spontaneously by “glanding” — featured prominently in many of his books, and Banks was for some years an enthusiastic consumer of marijuana, LSD and cocaine, though his preferred poison in later years was malt whisky, about which he became very well-informed. He wrote a non-fiction book, Raw Spirit (2003), about this passion, including an account of a tour of Scottish distilleries, and also won an episode of Celebrity Mastermind with whisky as his specialist subject. The same year, 2006, he captained a team of writers which won University Challenge against members of other professions.
He followed Complicity with his oddest book, Feersum Endjinn, which owed something to Russell Hoban’s Riddley Walker and was set on an Earth dominated by computer networks in the far-distant future. Much of it was written in phonetic Scots and textspeak. Whit, in 1995, imagined a Luddite cult in rural Scotland (sympathetically, given Banks’ antipathy to religion). Three more Culture novels, Excession, Inversions and Look to Windward appeared between 1996 and 2000. In between, Banks published two novels, A Song of Stone (1997) and The Business (1999) which, though not science fiction, had highly artificial settings. The first dealt with a civil war in a time and location which are never specified, and the second with a firm which has been attempting to control countries and shape global politics since the time of the Roman Empire.
Dead Air (2002) featured another dissolute journalist, this time on a radio station, and tackled, amongst other themes, the aftermath of the terrorist attacks on New York in 2001. Many critics felt that Banks, who tore up his passport and posted it to Tony Blair in protest against the Iraq War, had let his political priorities rather distort the shape of the narrative, and found the rants of the central figure, Ken Nott (a name which, in Scottish dialect, could be read as “doesn’t know”) tedious.
Banks then had, by his own remarkably productive standards, rather a fallow spell. His next book, science fiction but not set in the Culture, was 2004’s The Algebraist which, though it had its moments, was unnecessarily long-winded and seemed at points to lose the thread, while his next straight novel, The Steep Approach to Garbadale, a saga about a Scottish family firm which manufactured a popular game attempting to fend off a takeover by an American conglomerate, did not appear until 2007.
During this period, Banks’ relationship with his wife Annie, whom he had met in London before he published The Wasp Factory and whom he had married in 1992, had come under considerable strain. He later admitted that, earlier in their relationship, he discovered that the world of publishing was filled with “young, smart, attractive women” and had a series of affairs.
In 2006 he began a more settled liaison with Adele Hartley, who ran a horror film festival, and with whom he lived after separating from his wife the following year. Annie Banks died in 2009, shortly after their divorce was finalised.
His next two Culture novels, Matter (2008) and Surface Detail (2010) were generally held to be a return to form, though many readers were less certain what to make of Transition (2009) which, though it imagined a group of secret agents who could travel between universes, was not presented as a science fiction novel.
In person Banks was remarkably good company, and an extremely entertaining conversationalist. For much of his life he closely resembled a polytechnic lecturer, with his beard, leather jacket, spectacles and socialist views; under the influence of his girlfriend, he later became a rather snappier dresser.
A hatred of Tony Blair’s foreign policy led him to vote for the Scottish National Party, though he also voiced his support for figures from the far-Left. Though he lived 100 yards from Gordon Brown, he maintained that he had never met the former Labour leader and that “having never had any illusions about him, I wasn’t disillusioned by him”. He did, however, reapply for the passport he had torn up on the day Brown replaced Blair at Number 10.
For many years, Banks had a large collection of powerful cars but, after becoming convinced by the arguments of climate change activists, he sold them, acquired a hybrid car and announced that he would in future avoid flying whenever possible. This enabled him to duck out of book tours, which he disliked, though he performed very well in front of an audience.
In April this year, Banks announced that he was suffering from terminal gall-bladder cancer, and had only months to live. “I am officially Very Poorly”, ran the message on his website. He proposed to Adele Hartley, asking her to “do me the honour of being my widow”, and declared his intention to spend his final days visiting friends and relations. His last novel, The Quarry, is due to be published later this month.
Iain Banks, born February 16 1954, died June 9 2013

Guardian:

After we’d fondly imagined that the free, open and accountable society was merely being gradually encroached on by military and commercial interests, the Guardian revelations in recent days about the actions of the US National Security Agency seem to have shocked us awake to find that we are already living within a mature, widely embedded Orwellian nightmare (Pressure on government over secret intelligence gathering, 8 June).
If GCHQ has used the Prism software to spy on us at the US’s behest, let’s not accept its weasel words about operating under a “legal and policy framework” – whose laws, whose policies? – but rather name it and deal with it for what it is: institutional treachery. Secondly, if internet companies are using the supply of their popular goods and services as a cover for spying on their customers, we should consider whether they should have a right to operate here. Thirdly, it should be a priority to investigate rigorously how far this mindset of US political paranoia has spread among UK national institutions – there are rumours, for example, that at least one of our research councils has had its research programme on security directly influenced by US security interests. Finally, the US must be challenged at a political level about the concept of extra-territoriality which supports all these deeply disturbing developments in the UK.
Peter Healey
London
•  GCHQ’s obtaining US-gathered information about UK communications raises two key legal issues. First, GCHQ has sidestepped the procedures and safeguards laid down by the UK Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act 2000 (Ripa). Ripa was enacted to ensure that clandestine state access to private communications would be “in accordance with the law” and so compliant with article 8 of the European convention on human rights. UK citizens’ data has effectively been subjected to a form of extraordinary rendition. That cannot possibly be lawful. The UK government must make clear that the practice will stop immediately and that illegally obtained data will be deleted. Second, EU data protection legislation is undergoing reform, with a draft regulation now under scrutiny in the parliament. The sheer enormity of the US authorities’ collection of foreign data, including data of EU users held by US-based cloud and communications providers, reveals just how little protection we get from the EU’s current “safe harbour” approach to overseas data transfers. It also creates intolerable uncertainty for businesses operating comms and cloud services in the EU. The parliament and commission should urgently build into the new framework robust protection for the privacy of EU citizens’ data.
Gordon Nardell QC
London
• In the week that the Guardian revealed the global scale of US surveillance over private communications (‘We hack everyone everywhere. It’s what we do every day’, 8 June), economic and political leaders were meeting under the auspices of Bilderberg for “private” discussions from which the public are rigorously excluded (Tory MP criticises Cameron over Bilderberg meeting, 8 June).
So national “security” requires government to know what the people are saying to one another, but the latter must respect the “privacy” of the former? It is the fact that political leaders are meeting with private business interests that makes this a serious matter of public interest. It beggars belief that Cameron, Osborne, Balls and co believe this claim to their “privacy” can be taken seriously.
Mike Peters
Leeds
•  Some people in the world want to kill other people and some people don’t. I’m really not bothered if the government knows how often I visit the B&Q or John Lewis websites. What I am bothered about are people who want to put bombs on planes or by the sides of roads during a marathon. In this modern age of communication we all have a price to pay.
Michael Burgess
Tunbridge Wells, Kent
•  My concern over data-trawling is with the possibility – strong probability even – of mission creep. President Obama says it is to protect America from terrorists, but how long before that (ill-defined) category widens to include people with dissident ideas and, eventually, ideas opposed to (or inconvenient for) whichever government is currently in power? In other words, how long to e-Watergate?
Tim Gossling
Cambridge
• Of all the comments on the US’s huge covert surveillance operation, the most egregious comes from Senator Saxby Chambliss: “This has been going on for seven years … we have collected significant information on bad guys, but only on bad guys.” Eh? How on earth can he know? Do “bad guys” have a label that says “bad guy”? What utter nonsense!
Richard Carter
London
•  I wonder how many countries that have suffered from decades of US support for the dictatorial aims of such vile people as Pinochet in Chile and the Contras in Nicaragua – to name but two – would agree with Rand Paul (Our liberty is being taken, 8 June) when he says “the American tradition has long been to err on the side of liberty”.
Tony Hills
Morchard Bishop, Devon
•  Protecting national security and protecting the status quo are not the same thing, but those in power may be unable to make the distinction.
Khalil Martin
Woking
• Does this explain the apparent immunity to tax of Apple, Amazon and co?
Sue Atkins
Lewes, East Sussex
• The answer’s obvious. Let’s go back to writing letters and using the post.
Ruth Grimsley
Sheffield, South Yorkshire

In the late 60s, at the Piccadilly theatre, Bea Lillie was appearing in The Amorous Prawn. Well into her 70s, as soon as she appeared on stage the applause began, and only ceased when other cast members wanted to be heard by the audience. But every time Bea uttered her lines, the applause started again. Needless to say, at the end of the performance, what had been a constant ovation became a long standing ovation, during and after innumerable curtain calls (Letters, 7 June).
Chas Brewster
Boston, Lincolnshire
• Recently returned from two months in Nicaragua, I was saddened to read your article on new things to do in Nicaragua (Packing it all in, Travel, 8 June) which suggested trips to cock fights. Nicaragua has many more interesting cultural experiences to offer which are more typical of a peaceful and friendly country. Highlighting this cruel sport is disgraceful.
Hazel Lowther
Powfoot, Dumfries & Galloway
• Re pastures new (Letters, 8 June), has anyone seen a lawn being manicured?
Keith Baker
Pontefract, West Yorkshire
• Guardian correspondents have spotted a lot of thin veils recently: one on an attack by Sir David Nicholson (Departing NHS chief says coalition wasted two years, 7 June), one each on a plan and a fear on 4 June, another attack on 2 June and an excuse on 31 May. Could you spare someone to try the Simon Hoggart test and have a look for a thick veil or two? You haven’t reported one in ages.
Oliver Fulton

The Workers’ Education Association commemorated the 100th anniversary of Emily Wilding Davison’s death with a day school in Chesterfield (What would you fight for? 4 June). Emily was a volunteer with the WEA. We learned about her, her legacy and the issues of equality and democracy that remain. Katherine Connelly, co-ordinator of the Emily Wilding Davison Memorial Campaign, Chesterfield MP Toby Perkins – successor of Tony Benn, who put a plaque to Emily in the Commons – and other fine speakers illustrated the value of adult education, which the government applauds but starves.
Dr Graham Ullathorne
Chesterfield
• The blue plaque outside 18 Brookside, where Millicent Garrett Fawcett, the veteran leader of Britain’s constitutional suffragists, and her daughter, Philippa Fawcett, the first woman to obtain the top score in the mathematical tripos, lived in Cambridge, reads: “Henry Fawcett … lived here with his wife and daughter, 1874-1884.” The cause for which Emily Davison gave her life still has far to go.
Professor Mary Joannou
Cambridge
• John Sutherland, in his piece about Mary Ward (A liberal lost to history, 4 June), notes that there is no blue plaque to her in London, though the Mary Ward Centre does her justice. There is, however, a blue plaque on the house in Bradmore Road, Oxford, where she lived when she was first married, and has been since 28 April 2012. It reads: “Mary Arnold Ward (Mrs Humphry Ward), 1851-1920, Social reformer, novelist.”
Susanna Hoe
Oxford

Alongside his distinguished career as a medieval historian, Barrie Dobson made a great contribution to cinema in York. When he joined the university in 1964 he had already been secretary of the film society at St Andrews. At York he served in that capacity for three seasons, at a time when the British Film Institute was seeking to develop regional centres of exhibition.
Barrie initiated negotiations with the BFI, and the York film theatre opened in the university’s central hall in October 1968 with a screening of the Danish film The Red Mantle, with its director, Gabriel Axel, present. Barrie served as chair of YFT until 1973, and the organisation that he founded continued to bring high-quality cinema to York, both on campus and in the city, until a commercial arts cinema arrived in the 1990s.

Independent:

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It was appalling – but not unexpected – to read that by 2020 almost half of Britons will get cancer during their lifetime (7 June). It is often said that this rise is partly due to an ageing population, but cancer rates have risen more than life expectancy. Cancer incidence has also risen in children and young people.
There are over 70,000 chemicals in use now and plastic chemicals, such as bisphenol A, can disrupt hormones. Benzene is a proven cause of cancer yet is widely used by industry. The EU now admits that many chemicals were allowed into common use without proper safety testing to see if they cause cancer.
Professor Andreas Kortenkamp of the University of London has said the use of a range of commonly used chemicals which can interfere with the human immune system must be reduced. Calling on the EU to take action, he said: “We will not be able to reduce cancer without addressing preventable causes.”
A Wills Ruislip, Greater London
With half of the population destined to get cancer (report, 7 June), why are we not discussing the cancer-causing effects globally of the 2,000 nuclear weapons test explosions in the atmosphere, the radiation from such megadisasters as Chernobyl and Fukushima, the widespread use of radioactive depleted uranium in wars round the world including Iraq and Afghanistan, radiation leaks from nuclear power stations, and radiation leaks from nuclear waste dumps round the world?
Jim McCluskey, Twickenham, Middlesex
Your report that nearly half of the population will develop cancer at some time once again highlights the need for prevention. The government TV warning that smoking causes mutations which cause cancers does not mention the fact that countless other environmental exposures also do so.
Mutations to DNA which are precursor conditions to cancers are caused by many environmental agents including prescribed drugs, chemicals and radiation. Only by identifying the causative agents and avoiding them as much as possible can there be any real cancer prevention.
The battle to reduce the 5 per cent benzene, a haemotoxin, genotoxin and carcinogen, added to unleaded petrol when it was introduced, to not over 1 per cent shows that prevention by controlling the level of causative agents is possible.
Edward Priestley, Brighouse, West Yorkshire
The ‘hassle-free’ route to legal aid reform
I was delighted to discover that the Ministry of Justice has decided to opt for the “hassle-free” method of reading the responses to its current consultation exercise into legal-aid cuts, by the employment of a company called Citizen Space to do it for them.
Not only does this ably demonstrate how public money can be spent paying private companies to do a job one might expect of public servants, it will of course mean that the Ministry won’t have to actually read them at all, no doubt making it so much easier to ignore the flood of well-reasoned and sensible arguments made by lawyers up and down the country (6 June) pointing out that these ridiculous proposals are unworkable, ill thought-out, and will actually destroy all that is good in our legal system.
Rebecca Herbert, East Langton, Leicestershire
Colin Burke (Letters, 3 June) eloquently exposes the absurd hypocrisy of government welfare policy and the rise of the foodbank society. But the single overwhelming force that propels this and every other aspect of government today is that of privatisation. The saying that the United States practices socialism for the rich and capitalism for the poor is fast becoming the reality of modern-day Britain.
The cosy divvying up of publicly owned assets from rail, water and post office, failed banks funded entirely by public money, the unaccountable and unelected quangos, the health service pinched and pummelled towards the private sector, the insane cutting of legal aid and its farming out to cost-cutting private firms, and of course the relentless spread of the supermarket arachnids; the list is endless and all-encompassing, and apparently unstoppable.
And now, with their encouragement of food banks and charities, the government seeks to privatise poverty.
Christopher Dawes, London W11
Law is not on Erdogan’s side
You report that Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has said the recent protests in Turkey bordered on illegality (7 June). One salient fact that may have been lost in the reporting of recent events is that the work on redeveloping the Gezi park had already begun months ago – a huge underground car park had been partly constructed – but was then stopped when the local branch of the main opposition party launched a legal objection. When the bulldozers arrived and started knocking a wall down, the case was still going through the courts and no decision had yet been made. Some people, knowing that the whole case was still in the courts, and noticing the bulldozers, organised a small occupation of the park and things went from there.
Erdogan has said that the park project will go ahead anyway, but in saying this he is openly disregarding the courts. This is one reason why lawyers are active participants in the Taksim protest. Erdogan may say that the protests are illegal, but in the case of the park redevelopment the law is not (yet) on his side.
Charles Turner, Department of Sociology University of Warwick, Coventry
Self-confessed middle-lane hog
How is hogging defined? (Letters, 7 June.) I am a professed middle-lane driver. I do this because it minimises the need to move from lane to lane at every merging junction or around every slow car or truck, given the risk that this manoeuvre entails. I drive at the speed limit so theory says I shouldn’t be holding anyone up or forcing them into this same risky move. Am I still considered a hogger? Surely if I am holding someone up it can only be if they are breaking another law – the speed limit – and at any rate they have the outside lane to pass on if required.
Perry Rowe, London SE4
There’s a big misconception about motorway middle-lane hogging. It is only a bad thing if you wish to drive at less than 70mph. If you want to travel at 70 (or even a tad faster), staying on the middle lane is good because it avoids constantly moving in and out of the slower-moving inside lane. And the road safety experts tell us that changing lanes is a hazardous manoeuvre and should be minimised.
Clamp down on middle-lane slowcoaches, yes, but leave the 70- drivers alone – they do not obstruct anyone driving legally, they are making the roads safer by reducing lane-changing, and the speed merchants still have the outside lane.
Ray Chandler Shoreham-by-Sea, West Sussex
Give us a reason to vote Labour
Your leading article (7 June), asking how Ed Miliband can identify a compelling reason to vote Labour rather than Tory or Liberal Democrat in 2015, says it all about present-day politics. The Labour heartlands of working classes, struggling to bring up decent families on poorly paid jobs have gone – along with the jobs – while the traditional Tory heartlands have survived and have been augmented by “escapees” from the working classes understandably enjoying their improving status.
I refuse to believe though that we have become so selfish and so disdainful of the real poor, that we could contemplate re-electing a government that shows no sign of understanding the devastating effects of the austerity measures on families the length and breadth of the country.
Change in the benefits system was necessary; a shake up of the NHS was necessary; saving on government spending was necessary. What isn’t necessary is that the real poor are worse off while those of us with plenty still have plenty.
The Labour Party may have lost its heartlands, but surely there must be a future for a Labour Party that still champions the less fortunate?
Robert Stewart, Wilmslow Cheshire
Why is this person making laws?
You quote Baroness Knight as saying, repeatedly, “I was only saying what I believe”. This is fine and many 90-year-olds would hold similar beliefs, hoping for a return to the good old days of locking people up for crimes of homosexuality and abortion. I can quite imagine my late parents, both wonderful people, saying much the same (one of the reasons I never came out to them, much though I wanted to). I suspect the Baroness is a feisty, warm-hearted person stuck in a 1950s mindset; why on earth are we paying her to draft the laws of England and Wales?
Allan Jones, London SE9
According to Baroness Knight marriage is “about a man and a woman, created to produce children, producing children” which not only excludes gays from marriage, but women who can’t have children and couples who choose not to.
Sue Simpson, Brighton, East Sussex
Microchipped moggies
The story about Freya the Treasury cat was very entertaining (8 June). But it has a serious point: Freya was reunited with the Osbornes because she has a microchip. So does Minnie, my lovely 15-year-old tortoiseshell, who went missing last November. Nearly five weeks later I got a call from the RSPCA to say she’d been found, in very poor shape, and taken to one of their animal hospitals. At that stage the prognosis was gloomy, but Minnie made a full recovery and has now been home for six months.
Brenda Griffith-Williams, London N8
Self-harm shame
What possible benefit can there be to anyone in a 15-year-old girl having her self-harm attempts reported in a national newspaper? (“Michael Jackson’s daughter Paris ‘fine’ in Los Angeles hospital after apparent suicide attempt”, 6 June). Shameful!
James Ward-Campbell Long, Whatton, Leicestershire
Pubs’ demise
Pubs are not closing because they are no longer commercially viable as we keep hearing (7 June) but because the breweries have found other more lucrative uses for the plots, such as conversion to housing. Many of the pubs that have been closed were popular and well run. Once again, community amenities are being sacrificed by, and for, big business.
Cherry Heywood-Jones, Cambridge

Times:

To claim that public authorities are cowed by legally-aided litigants into settlements because of financial constraints is risible
Sir, Chris Grayling will be grateful for James Blair’s comfortable words (letter, June 6) about his proposals in relation to legal aid for Judicial Review (JR) . The rhetoric of his consultation paper is misleading, however.
Few decisions of public authorities are challenged. Actual abuse of the system from an objective viewpoint is another matter. If there is abuse, legal aid cannot be blamed. The consultation response of the Bingham Centre for the Rule of Law compared the available statistics for legally-aided and non-legally-aided JR and found nothing to suggest legally aided judicial review claims are pursued in a reckless way that results in a relatively high number of “weak” cases. “On the contrary, there is everything to suggest that legally aided cases appear to be handled far more cautiously than those which are unfunded, and lawyers in legally-aided applications are far more likely only to pursue cases with merit.” You, of course, need to show merit even to qualify for legal aid.
Mr Blair is exercised about asylum and immigration cases, the only area in which JR has grown. It has grown not because of abuse but because, as Mrs May recognised when she announced the abolition of UKBA, it is one of the most dysfunctional parts of government. But this cannot justify the proposals: the Crime and Courts Act 2013 s.22 means that the burden of these cases will, for better or worse, be transferred from the High Court to the Upper Tribunal.
To claim that public authorities are cowed by legally-aided litigants and their devious lawyers into settlements because of financial constraints is risible. Compared to claimants, public authorities have very deep pockets; they can and do defend their decisions if they are defensible. Cases are compromised on terms favourable to claimants when public authorities know they are on to a losing battle. They rightly choose not to waste public money defending the indefensible. If only Mrs May, who has proved willing to hire ever more expensive silks to argue ever more tenuous points, practised the same frugality.
Andrew Rose
London WC2
Sir, As a solicitor of some 40 years I am surprised by the furore over the withdrawal of legal aid. I agree with your correspondent James Blair: JR was almost unknown 15 years ago and now is a hobbyhorse for all sorts of lost causes. Lawyers are supposed to make a judgment that a case has merit before they commit their client but these lawyers do nothing of the kind. It is also common practice at the Bar for obvious lost causes to settle before a judge sees them and awards costs orders against the lawyers for waste but never before the barrister has his brief; then he can be paid whether the case proceeds or not. Systemic abuse has been going on for years with the public purse and it is about time it stopped.
James Hueston
Cheltenham, Glos

This proposal, and attacks on legal aid, show that the Government has a dangerous lack of understanding of the social value of law
Sir, Placing the nation’s court system in private hands would undermine the rule of law, judicial independence and the separation of powers (report, May 28, letters May 31, June 1 & 4). The Constitutional Reform Act 2005 obliges the Lord Chancellor, Mr Grayling, to “ensure the provision of resources for the efficient and effective support of the courts”. This requires court buildings, equipment and personnel to be provided and controlled by the State.
On September 4, 2008 your Law Editor said the Labour Government had continued the “outrageous” policy of the Conservatives who in 1988-89 brought in the idea that civil courts should become self-financing. Lord Scott of Foscote, the law lord, said this idea was unconstitutional, adding that a country may not regard itself as civilised unless it has a proper system for the administration and attainment of civil justice.
This proposal, and attacks on legal aid, show that the Government has a dangerous lack of understanding of the social value of law.
Francis Bennion
Budleigh Salterton, Devon

Using information from A&E patients injured in violence to target locations and times of violence can cut violence-related A&E attendances
Sir, The “A&E emergency”, as Alice Thomson observes (June 5), would be far less serious if it were not for alcohol abuse, injury and downright delinquent demands. Working with local authority, police, public health and third sector partners, my team has developed two ways to ameliorate these problems.
Using information from A&E patients injured in violence to target locations and times of violence has cut violence-related A&E attendances in Cardiff significantly.
We also opened a late-night alcohol treatment centre in a city-centre chapel where intoxicated people can be taken by friends, street pastors and ambulance and cared for by nurse practitioners in a place of safety until they have sobered up. This reduces A&E attendances and waiting times significantly. It also frees up police officers, increases ambulance availability and reduces disturbing and frightening antisocial behaviour in A&E waiting areas.
The introduction of minimum alcohol prices as promised in the Government’s 2012 alcohol strategy certainly has the potential to reduce demands on A&E, but hospital specialists could do more to help.
Jonathan Shepherd
Professor of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery,
Cardiff University

How can so many thousands of EU and non-EU medical migrants find work if there are too many graduates from our universities?
Sir, Anna Soubry, the health minister, is quoted (June 6) as saying, “the NHS needs to train more doctors in order to provide the same level of service”. She added, “the solution is that we need to increase the numbers of GPs and we are doing that”.
However, in a Hansard answer provided to Lord Laird, on June 3, another health minister, Earl Howe, says a “Centre for Workforce Intelligence analysis indicated a likely oversupply in the medical workforce in the future, with the possible consequence of unemployed doctors. The Health and Education National Strategic Exchange recommended a 2 per cent reduction in the numbers entering medical schools and also recommended that a further review be undertaken to inform 2015 intakes. These recommendations were accepted by ministers.”
A reduction in UK training places is hard to square with an earlier Lords answer on January 28 that 17,081 foreign doctors were recorded by the GMC as registering over the three years 2010-12 compared to 21,207 new medical graduates who were UK trained. How can so many thousands of EU and non-EU medical migrants find work if there are too many graduates from our universities?
Jeffrey Dudgeon
Belfast

These concoctions were marketed widely in the second half of the 19th century and were endorsed by many well known figures at the time
Sir, You refer to “nerve tonics” to restore “weak nerves” of the type that afflicted Mrs Bennet in Pride and Prejudice (report, June 7). These were marketed widely in the second half of the 19th century. Around 1863 the chemist Angelo Mariani hit upon the notion of steeping coca leaves in cheap red wine. The concoction contained about 35mg of cocaine per wineglassful and was advertised as a restorative for “body, brain and nerves”. Mariani used a host of endorsements to sell his product and Popes Leo XIII and Pius X and Thomas Edison were happy to see their names appearing on the adverts, the last claiming that it enabled him “to stay awake for hours”. It was praised by athletes as it was believed to improve performance. By 1910 concerns about cocaine misuse were becoming commonplace and with the death of Mariani in 1914 the product seems to have ceased to be made.
Professor Alan Dronsfield
Royal Society of Chemistry

Telegraph:

SIR – What a sad state the English choral tradition finds itself in. Thirty years on from the time when church divas up and down the country stripped off their cassocks and elbowed their way to the nearest microphone, we are now at the stage where very few people know anything about good vocal technique.
Those stoic choirs left dwindling on are suffering from an aging membership of rasping sopranos and an imbalance in vocal parts, with first tenors all but extinct. My poor mother complains that on a Sunday morning she is forced to doze on her deaf side to smother the sound of Sunday Worship on Radio 4, which my father insists upon.
Choir after choir, Sunday after Sunday – the sound is excruciating. What is to be done?
Rachel Musgrove
Surrey Hills Chamber Choir (currently desperate for two first tenors)
Cranleigh, Surrey

SIR – Iain Martin’s interesting article about Ed Miliband (“Is this the Tories’ secret weapon?” Opinion, June 2) missed the point that fundamentally Ed Miliband is a Marxist academic, and entirely unsuited to the business of government. He and Neil Kinnock belong to the same species of socialist dreamers that died out in most countries after the collapse of Soviet Russia in about 1990.
As Mr Martin pointed out, George Osborne thought that the Labour Party chose the wrong leader and should have appointed Ed’s brother David, while William Hague thought Ed was the right choice.
This suggests that George Osborne’s political antennae are a good deal sharper than William Hague’s. The Chancellor has come in for rather too much unjustified criticism in recent weeks. He holds this Government together, which is more than can be said for the Foreign Secretary and his persistent and unsuccessful attempts to re-organise the Middle East.
Timothy Stroud
Salisbury, Wiltshire
SIR – You claim that Ed Miliband’s leadership is an electoral liability for the Labour Party. True enough, but David Cameron and Nick Clegg are also liabilities for their respective parties. This is why I will not vote for any of these so-called leaders at the next general election.
Related Articles
Our choirs aren’t what they used to be – lend them a tenor
09 Jun 2013
We should not have to vote for the best of a bad bunch.
David Andrews
Bacup, Lancashire
Muslim monitoring
SIR – It surely stands to reason that if the Government generously funds a movement designed to monitor racist attacks against Muslims, or any group, it is in the vested interests of that group to find plenty to complain about. If they fail to do so they will cease to exist.
The Tell Mama project is no exception. It is time to assess the value to society of this expenditure. Andrew Gilligan (Gilligan on Sunday, June 2) shows that the facts indicate very clearly that violence and aggression are largely coming from the Muslim community, not being perpetrated against it. Unless we have honesty these issues will never be resolved.
Mick Ferrie
Mawnan Smith, Cornwall
SIR – Andrew Gilligan’s article on Islamophobia is absolutely spot on; it rips apart the propaganda of Tell Mama and other subversive groups that seek to divide and destroy our tolerant society.
Most of us thought Enoch Powell’s “Rivers of Blood” speech was distasteful and extreme 40 years ago. Has our modern multi-ethnic society really progressed or just produced different victims and perpetrators of hate and extremism?
Robert Beadle
Bexhill on Sea, East Sussex
Gay marriage Bill
SIR – The way the Gay marriage legislation was rushed through Parliament was an abuse of the democratic process.
The whole subject has been discussed in far too much unnecessary haste and although David Cameron hopes that his gerrymandering will soon be forgotten, it will undoubtedly prove to be a forlorn hope.
B J Colby
Portishead, Somerset
SIR – You say in your perceptive leading article (June 2) that “the monarch was wedded to her people”. Consequently, each of Her Majesty’s loyal subjects should defend the promises she made at her coronation.
In particular, no Bill that is not in accordance with our laws and customs and the doctrine of the Church of England should be presented to her for the Royal Assent.
John Strange
Worthing, East Sussex
Chemical dangers
SIR – John Lister-Kaye’s eye-opening article on the disturbing effects of chemicals on life forms (“Worried about more than weather”, News Review, June 2) should be compulsory reading for everyone. We all enjoy the benefits that chemicals bring to our lives but we give little consideration to the unintended consequences of their use.
Scientists now recognise warning signs that human reproductive ability may be threatened through use of chemicals employed for otherwise benign purposes. This alone is surely reason enough “to muster consumer power”, as Mr Lister-Kaye suggests, not to demonise chemicals per se but to question more closely their long-term everyday use.
We are a clever but, unfortunately, impatient species. Everyone embraces the development of new products but no one appears to have the time, resources or understanding to scrutinise the safety of the frightening cocktail of endocrine disruptors already unleashed upon the planet. Is there any organisation capable of grasping this nettle before it’s too late?
Peter Saunders
Salisbury, Wiltshire
SIR – Regarding John Lister-Kaye’s article, I am a retired nurse and have been trying to make the authorities fully aware of the damage to people’s bodies by the proliferation of toxins, drugs and chemicals. It is useless looking for cures when prevention would do the job, but as ever, money is more important to those who would lose out if these poisons were eliminated. Who is brave enough to do something about it?
Dorothy Watt
Worthing, East Sussex
High-speed farce
SIR – John S Moxham’s idea (Letters, June 2) that a high-speed train might be halted by lack of wind-generated power, made for a delightful vision.
But unless HS2 is to resemble a sailing ship becalmed in the doldrums, it might be wise to consider some alternative to asking its passengers to get out and push.
Richard Shaw
Dunstable, Bedfordshire
SIR – Two of your correspondents (Letters, June 2) comment on the distinct possibility of the HS2 trains only being able to run when the wind blows and wind turbines can produce electricity.
Could I suggest therefore that it would make more sense to do away with the electrical power generation “middle man” and to fit the trains with sails?
John Newbury
Warminster, Wiltshire
Regulating the banks
SIR – Finally there is some common sense coming out of America. Liam Halligan (Business Comment, June 2) states that draft legislation to restore the Glass-Steagall Act has been introduced in the Senate with a similar measure in the House of Representatives.
The interest in separating the retail from investment (casino) banks is growing and it doesn’t come a moment too soon.
Anyone who has followed the growth of the financial institutions and the power they now wield over our politicians, directly affecting the public they both serve, cannot help but link the banking hegemony to the repeal of the Act.
To ask the banking industry to regulate itself is akin to asking a child to avoid candy. Not a hope.One can only hope that Britain sees the light.
Diane Queen
Henllan, Denbighshire
A bad spell
SIR – I am appalled by your report of the views of David Crystal on the “inevitability” of deterioration in English spelling (“Rhubarb, rubarb”, June 2)
However, what particularly irks me is his implying that “judgment” without the middle ‘e’ is an instance of this “now acceptable in many publishing and newspaper style guides”.
He can hardly plead youth as an excuse for ignorance, and as a professor of linguistics he surely ought to know that judgment and acknowledgment were normally spelt without the middle ‘e’ before he was born.
My copy of the Concise Oxford Dictionary (3rd edition, 1934) allows both versions of each of these, but as a schoolboy I was taught very firmly that for both words the correct spelling was without the ‘e’.
Peter Milton
Leamington Spa, Warwickshire
SIR – There is nothing silent about the ‘h’ in rhubarb. Try pronouncing “rhubarb” and “rubbish”. The ‘h’ in rhubarb alters the pronunciation of the ‘r’. There is a significant change in the position of the tongue.
The reason is that the ‘h’, as in ancient Greek, is an aspirate. The dropping of the “e” in judgement is simply Americanising. Do we want them to destroy English?
Dr Michael Ford
Villeneuve-sur-Lot, Lot-et-Garonne, France
Food for thought?
SIR – Why don’t you publish an edible edition of the paper? It could be a small pamphlet encased in a hygienic film,containing views, advice, columns and advertising. There are such things as edible underpants and birthday cards –so why not an edible newspaper?
Rory Fyfe Smith
Conwy, Denbighshire
What is causing our songbirds to decline?
SIR – Ed Hutchings (Letters, June 2) is out of date when he claims that farming, habitat loss and climate change are solely responsible for songbird decline while dismissing the impact of predation.
Over the last 25 years, habitat has been improving with increased hedge planting and our tree cover has doubled since 1920. 70 per cent of our farmland is now in agri-environment schemes. None of this has delivered any overall increase in farmland or woodland birds.
Meanwhile, numbers of all their avian and mammalian predators have more than doubled, with cats alone killing about 100 million songbirds; half their annual total.
The real tragedy is that the small amount of science in this area has been largely discredited. No fully experimental study has ever been conducted and the University of Reading cast grave doubts on the prevailing correlative studies of surveys especially when they find no evidence of predation impact.
High-quality experimental research is desperately needed to provide solutions and prevent extinctions but it is difficult and expensive. The conservation establishment avoids this, fearing uncomfortable recommendations for the management of our wildlife.
Nick Forde
Trustee, SongBird Survival
London SW4
SIR – I fully support what Paul Sargeantson (Letters, May 26) says about the menace of red kites.
I live in Galloway where we have an estimated 380 red kites (RSPB figures) with the consequent decline of other species – curlews, lapwings, redshank and oystercatchers have all but disappeared from the hills. Larks, stonechats and wheatears, which used to be common, are all in decline and we are left with a proliferation of protected raptors.
I read that Scottish Natural Heritage is considering releasing lynx into the wild. God preserve us from the urban-based conservation bodies who are inflicting irreparable damage on the rural areas. They do not understand that a healthy countryside is dependent on balance and by introducing predator after predator, the balance has been destroyed.
Anne Sinclair
St John’s Town of Dalry
Dumfries and Galloway
SIR – I have never seen a red kite in Derbyshire, where I was born and raised, but I know that the biggest threat to our songbirds is the magpie. When I was a lad the only place you would see a magpie was over farmland.
There are magpies to be seen in every garden, which was once the domain of the songbirds. Shooting a magpie in the garden is no longer allowed.
It is country folk that know the countryside, not scientists. A magpie cull would soon return the songbirds to our gardens.
Trevor Henderson
Whaley Bridge, Derbyshire
BBC’s holy weather
SIR – It is unfair to criticise the BBC for allowing a radical Islamist airtime.
They do such a good job suppressing scientists like David Bellamy and distinguished climatologist Prof Bob Carter for daring to question their holy doctrine of global warming.
Keith Rothwell
Huddersfield, West Yorkshire
Door to Ecuador
SIR – Julian Assange? As far as I am concerned, Ecuador is welcome to him!
Paul Mason
Long Sutton, Lincolnshire

Irish Times:
Sir, – Chief among the reasons given by Enda Kenny for the abolition of the Setnad was that it “did nothing to challenge the unattainable policies of the Celtic tiger” (Front page, June 6th). Surely Mr Kenny realises just how absurd, not to mention dangerous, this line of argument is?
Did the Dáil cry halt to the policies of the Ahern era? Did the President of the day do anything to stop them? And in the courts, did our learned judges attempt to intervene? The answer is a clear No in each case.
So what is to stop some future government, during some future economic or political crisis, from pointing the finger of blame at these remaining institutions of State and demanding their abolition in order to grab a quick headline and to get a boost in the polls?
The only constitutional office or institution which did challenge the policies which brought us to ruin was that of the Comptroller and Auditor General. If we were to follow Mr Kenny’s position to its absurd conclusion, then perhaps we ought to establish a dictatorship led by this office?
Those truly to blame for the policies of the Celtic tiger are the politicians who implemented them, and the people who continued to vote them back into office. And yet Mr Kenny’s insists that it was the institutions of democracy themselves which are to blame for the crisis, and not the incompetent and self-serving people who abused those institutions for their own political gain.
Such a stance is the very anathema of democracy, not its salvation as Mr Kenny seems to believe. – Yours, etc,
THOMAS RYAN BL,
Mount Tallant Avenue,

Sir, – Just in case anyone was under the impression that Ireland was somehow immune to PRISM-type activities (“Online surveillance defended by US spy chief”, Business, June 7th), it is worth recalling the 2005 Criminal Justice (Terrorist Offences) Act, introduced by Michael McDowell when he was minister for justice. Article 63 of the Act permits the Garda commissioner to request Irish fixed line and mobile phone operators to “retain, for a period of three years, traffic data or location data or both”.
One would imagine that the exercise of such powers would require pretty strong legitimation. Instead the commissioner may make a request on the basis of such broad criteria as the “prevention, detection, investigation or prosecution of crime” or “the safeguarding of the security of the State”.
These are unusual powers by any standards and far in excess of the six months limit on data retention recommended by the EU Directorate with responsibility for data protection. – Yours, etc,
Dr RODDY FLYNN,
School of Communications,

   
Sir, – Leaving aside for a moment the squalid squabbling of the politicians, the greasy fumbling of the bankers and the excited chattering of the Leaving Cert classes, let us consider something really important.
It’s high June: the hedgerows are white with whitethorn blossom, the verges are cream with clover, the sycamore drips with nectar – yet no honeybee is seen or heard in the land; at least I, preoccupied such things, have yet to meet one.
An occasional, lone bumblebee haunts the red clover, and a very few hoverflies hover, but the lovely apis mellifera on her heroic, epic mission of not only stocking our shelves with the golden ambrosia but also making fruitful our orchards and vegetable farms – she is marked disastrously absent.
The decline, indeed decimation, of the honeybee and her close cousins is well documented among scientists and apiarists yet rarely makes front-page headlines much less the six o’clock news.
To encounter no honeybees in April could be deemed unfortunate, to observe none in May probably careless – but to search in vain by meadow, grove and garden through the warm, scented days of midsummer is truly nightmarish. Apocalyptic is not too strong a word. – Yours, etc,
RICHARD GALLAGHER ,

Sir, – With reference to Barry Walsh’s magnificent contribution (June 3rd) to alleviate our national debt: our son can also claim to have recently made his own sacrifice.
The Bank of Ireland has advised him that his annual net interest of €0.01c included a payment to the national coffers of €0.02c Dirt. Needless to say he is overjoyed with this state of affairs! – Yours, etc,
JOHN BURNETT,
Upper Kilmoney Road,

Sir, – Prof Martin Clynes (June 4th) writes about the need for legislation on stems cells and IVF to take account of scientific advances. What a good idea!
I’m neither a lawyer nor a scientist; just a woman who has undergone three cycles of IVF/ICSI that led to the creation of 20 embryos, seven of which were transferred to my uterus, and none of which ever got further than being about two dozen cells in total. None of them were humans, nor citizens, nor possessed of any rights. The fact is, most IVF embryos, and a high percentage of “natural embryos” too, are simply sets of flawed genetic operating instructions that decompile within days or hours.
IVF success rates hover at about 20 -25 per cent for women of over 38. A big factor is simply the age of our eggs. If a cycle creates on average, say, 10 embryos, that means about one in 40 of those created in this age group actually becomes a human. The other 39 are so genetically incomplete or flawed that they will never be more than a few dozen cells. They are not, nor ever will be citizens.
A recent scientific advance is a process to take images of developing embryos and measure their rate of development. A slowdown of just a few hours in the first couple of days indicates an embryo that will never grow into a human. Despite the headlines, this doesn’t mean more embryos will succeed, just that we can spot the failures earlier. This process may result in fewer but better surplus embryos being stored because we’ll be better able to identify the failures, but it won’t change the fact that most IVF embryos are still not viable.
Prof Clynes writes “now that cryopreservation of human ova has become routine, IVF can be practised without generating spare embryos at all”. This statement may unintentionally mislead people about the effectiveness of egg-freezing. The process was developed for women in their 20s facing fertility-destroying treatments such as chemotherapy. It gives them a chance of a pregnancy later on, but no guarantees. For women in their 30s who may mistakenly think they have time to freeze their eggs, the numbers of successful pregnancies resulting from egg-freezing are devastatingly low; less than 10 per cent. It doesn’t fit Prof Clynes’s argument, but now and for the foreseeable future, frozen eggs are far less likely than frozen embryos to result in the birth of an actual human being.
Any legislation will have to deal with the fact that surplus embryos will continue to be created, and in good faith, even if most of them are likely to fail.
Not only are embryos not humans, but the number of IVF embryos who go on to become humans is so, so small.
But lest I have discouraged anyone from trying, I should add that I’ll be starting a fourth and probably final round of IVF next week. If we are lucky enough to beat the odds this time, next April I hope to place an announcement in the births column of this newspaper, sharing with you all the news of the arrival of a human being, a citizen of this country or, as my husband and I like to think of it; a baby. – Yours, etc,
MARIA FARRELL,

Sir, – The new Environmental Protection Agency study researching the impact of the environmental and health factors of hydraulic fracking is a North-South initiative, yet the North and South are taking different approaches.
The South has put off all exploration licences till the report is completed, whereas in the North things are going ahead. We feel that the North and South should move in tandem, everything should be put on hold till the new report is completed.
We want to stress that the people in the North are entitled to the same level of protection as the people in the South. – Yours, etc,
MIRIAM HENNESSY,

Sir, – Patsy McGarry’s report (Home News, June 7th) on the clearing of the name of Fr Liam O’Brien from false allegations of abuse was welcome, as one can only imagine the stress involved to Fr O’Brien.
Hopefully the media and other groups who rightly highlighted the church’s past failings to deal with allegations of abuse, will also criticise those who make false claims, and acknowledge the church’s effective child protection policies today, where priests and religious in ministry present no more risk to children than any other health care professional . – Yours, etc,
FRANK BROWNE,

Irish Independent:

Madam– A few years ago a man knocked on my door at two in the morning in a highly agitated state, imploring me to help him get an immediate emergency hearing with a judge, to prevent his wife going abroad the next morning to have an abortion.
For the next few hours, over numerous cups of tea, we talked as I empathised with his despairing helplessness in his situation, waiting until daylight, where he might, in his traumatised and potentially suicidal state, drive home safely.
To this day he holds a personal annual vigil in memory of this lost birth, with the haunting guilt that he did (and could do) nothing to prevent this abortion.
Both pro and anti-abortion sides should address how a husband should act responsibly, in one case when he wants a birth while his wife chooses to abort and in the other case if he wants a termination while his wife insists on a birth.
Why have heated arguments by political and religious men who then legislate, when in all practicality, they can have no input into the decision? This appears to be a case of men having a vote, without, in fact, having a say!
Liam O Gogain,
Dundalk, Co Louth
Irish Independent
Madam –Frank McGurk (Letters, Sunday Independent, June 2, 2013) says that it would not have mattered if Britain had capitulated to Hitler in 1940 because the Soviet Union alone would have defeated Hitler single-handed.
Also in this section
Labour lapdog to Fine Gael whims
Have vote, but no say
McCarthy wrong on manufacturing
This is an absurdity. Soviet power to a large extent was a mirage. In the first months of Operation Barbarossa in 1941, the USSR lost half its economic base because of scorched-earth tactics and German occupation, as well as about a third of its population to German control. Realising his much diminished resources and that he could not prevail on his own, Stalin pestered Britain and the United States for years for aid and the opening of a Second Front in the West. Britain, and the United States in particular, gave the Soviets massive amounts of economic aid and logistical support; they eventually distracted most of the Luftwaffe from the Russian Front to Germany itself because of their bombing campaign; and they increasingly took on a large share of the German army – in Italy from 1943 and France from 1944. Despite this huge assistance, the Soviets were nearly bled white by the end of the war in 1945; therefore, it is nonsense that they could have won the war on their own. Even Marshal Zhukov in the Sixties freely admitted this.
If Britain had capitulated to Hitler in 1940, the United States would never have become involved even if it had wanted to because it would have needed Britain as a base to build up in before going into the continent. Because Britain held out in 1940-41 this bought time for the emergence of the Triple Alliance of the UK, US and USSR, an alliance which was essential to destroy Nazi Germany – the most awesome and terrible war machine of all time.
Dr Derek O’Flynn,
Ballsbridge, Dublin 4
PETAIN LACKED STRATEGIC VISION
Madam – With reference to Padraig McGinn’s letter last week (Sunday Independent, June 2, 2013), Marshal Petain may not have been cowardly but he had zero strategic military vision. He built the Maginot Line that cost France as much as German rearming with negative military strategic effect.
Article 8 of the surrender treaty that he signed compelled him to hand over the French navy to the Germans. The strategic effect of this was that it would enable the Germans to invade Ireland and Britain. Churchill took pre-emptive action requesting the French navy to join them at sea or go to a neutral port. Petain refused and the British navy sank the French navy.
Prior to this the Americans had a plan to rent the Irish Treaty ports and to bring the French navy here as well the 200,000 Free French troops then in Britain. This would have made invasion of Ireland by German air troops or naval-borne troops a difficult task, closing the back door to Britain. Both Petain and Dev lacked the strategic vision to co-operate to defend against the greatest evil the world ever faced.
Noel Flannery,
South Circular Road, Limerick
Irish Independent

Madam – Colm McCarthy’s article ‘Criticism of our tax policy the height of hypocrisy’ (Sunday Independent, May 26, 2013) contains numerous erroneous assertions.
Also in this section
Labour lapdog to Fine Gael whims
Have vote, but no say
Soviet power was a mirage
He says that most of the manufacturing jobs created in the Nineties were lost in the years after 2000 and attributes this to workers preferring to work in construction and related activities. In fact, most of the fall in manufacturing employment after 2000 was confined to just two sectors, electronics/electrical engineering and textiles/clothing. Medical devices grew by 60 per cent between 2000 and 2007, while chemicals/pharmaceuticals, metal, non-metallic and wood products also expanded.
In other words, the problem was sector-specific rather than a general malaise of the manufacturing sector. The idea that people would not take up manufacturing jobs when there was more money available in construction is based on the erroneous assumption that workers are interchangeable between those two sectors. In fact, a large proportion of the manufacturing jobs created in the Nineties were highly skilled jobs which are not open to unskilled workers. Only 400 of the 3,500 or so employees in the Apple plant in Cork are involved in making computers. The rest are involved in software, sales and support services for the firm’s other units across Europe.
McCarthy states that inward investment to Europe by US multinationals has been weak for many years. However, in both 2011 and 2012, the IDA attracted more new jobs to Ireland (mostly from the US) than in any year since 2001.
McCarthy’s statement that export services “have created few jobs for unemployed Irish workers” is misleading. Employment in this sector rose from less than 12,000 in 1990 to 120,000 last year. Where would these workers be if these jobs did not exist?
Dr Proinnsias Breathnach,
Department of Geography, NUI Maynooth
Irish Independent

Madam – I am writing to you to register my disgust at the fact that you allowed the piece ‘Let me shake hands with that brave fan’, written by Donal Lynch, to be published in your edition (Sunday Independent, June 2, 2013).
Also in this section
Have vote, but no say
Soviet power was a mirage
McCarthy wrong on manufacturing
The piece in question was a glib article about an incident at a Beyonce concert where an audience member appeared to slap the singer’s bottom. The woman is a singer, she was doing her job.
This article belittled the act by saying that the tickets to the concert were “about the price of a lap dance”, implying that the man deserved to do this because he had paid money.
As a young woman this makes me sick. This kind of opinion furthers the rape culture we find ourselves in. More so, publishing it gives it credibility and you have approved Lynch’s viewpoint by allowing it in your publication.
I understand this was meant to be a light-hearted piece, however I find this a much more dangerous way of packaging sexism. This kind of incident is not something to be laughed at.
I’m so disgusted I even had to write this letter.
Jeda de Bri,
Ashbourne, Co Meath
CRACKING READ ON LOST DECADE
Madam – What a fantastic article by Pat Fitzpatrick last Sunday: ‘The decade that Ireland forgot.’ I laughed out loud while reading his story of the Eighties.
Food just wasn’t that important – the only conversation most of us heard about food was, “Dad: ‘Are these the new potatoes?’ Mum: ‘Yes. Aren’t they grand and floury?’” We didn’t eat to feel better about ourselves – fish was for Friday, broccoli was for posers and steak was for millionaires.
Cracking read. Well done.
Martina Hilliard,
Skerrries, Co Dublin
Irish Independent


Joan’s feet

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11 June 2013 Joan’s feet

Off around the park listening to the Navy Lark, oh dear oh dear. Taffy has accidently been made a Commodore, and has taken Troutbridge off to Wales, to give his relatives trips round Cardigan bay. Priceless.
Another quiet day visit Joan post office chemist and Co-op, Joans legs very bad
We watch The Pallaisers The rise and rise of Mr Finn MP
Mary wins at scrabble but she gets under 400 perhaps I can have my revenge tomorrow.

Obituary:

Elizabeth Mavor
Elizabeth Mavor, who has died aged 85, wrote novels and biographies of unusual, adventurous women; her A Green Equinox was shortlisted for the Booker Prize in 1973, though she was probably better known as the author of The Ladies of Llangollen (1971), an account of the lives of a famous pair of 18th century Sapphists.

Elizabeth Mavor 
5:18PM BST 10 Jun 2013
Lady Eleanor Butler and Miss Sarah Ponsonby were friends who, in 1778, fled from their native Ireland and set up home together in a slate-roofed cottage in the north Wales village of Llangollen . There, until their deaths in 1829 and 1831 respectively, they spent their days together, industriously gardening and improving their minds by reading the classics, studying languages and writing journals and letters. The subject of much gossip and romantic speculation, they became celebrities and their visitors included royalty, philanthropists, artists, writers and poets.
The nature of their “romantic friendship” excited much curiosity over the years. They referred to each other as “My Beloved” or “My Better Half”; slept in the same bed and dressed like men with top hats and fitted jackets, their hair cut short . Most commentators nowadays assume they were lesbians, yet few who visited them thought they were and neither did Elizabeth Mavor. In her biography, she pointed out that the word “romantic” simply meant fanciful in the 18th century; that it was the fashion for friends to speak to each other in language people now reserve for sexual partners; that it was not uncommon to share a bed with a sister or a friend, and that the ladies’ hairstyles and mannish hats followed a French fashion and were in any case practical for the country.
The two women’s friendship, she maintained, was a perfect union of souls — and no more: “Depending as they did upon time and leisure, they were aristocratic, they were idealistic, blissfully free, allowing for a dimension of sympathy between women that would not now be possible outside an avowedly lesbian connection. Indeed, much that we would now associate solely with a sexual attachment is contained in romantic friends: tenderness, loyalty, sensibility, shared beds, shared tastes, coquetry, even passion.”
The daughter of an engineer, Elizabeth Osborne Mavor was born in Glasgow on December 17 1927 and educated at St Leonards School, St Andrews, and at St Anne’s College, Oxford, where she read Modern History and edited Cherwell. After graduation she worked for the magazine Argosy , wrote reviews for newspapers and began writing fiction.
In her first novel, Summer in the Greenhouse (1959), an elderly woman tells the story of a youthful affair . She wrote several more novels, including A Green Equinox in which the heroine becomes involved in an affair with the married owner of a grand country estate, but ultimately forms deeper friendships with the other women in his life — his wife and mother.
Elizabeth Mavor became interested in women like the Llangollen ladies not so much because of their ambiguous sexuality but because of their willingness to flout convention. In a similar vein, her The White Solitaire (1988) was a fictionalised account of the life of Mary Read, an 18th century woman who lived as a man, concealing her identity in her life as a soldier and sailor-turned-pirate.
Elizabeth Mavor’s other non-fiction works included editions of the American journals of the 19th century actress Fanny Kemble and Grand Tours of Katherine Wilmot: France 1801-3 and Russia 1805-7 (1992), the edited journals of an Irish socialite and traveller. A Year with the Ladies of Llangollen (1984) was an edited selection of entries from their journals, letters and account books.
Her biographies included Virgin Mistress: a study in survival, an account of the life of Elizabeth Chudleigh, a pretty country maid with social aspirations who charmed the royal houses of Europe and became Duchess of Kingston, but was later tried for bigamy.
In 1953 Elizabeth Mavor married the illustrator Haro Hodson, who survives her with their two sons.
Elizabeth Mavor, born December 17 1927, died May 22 2013

Guardian:

I doubt if all the secrets of the Kikuyu uprising will ever be known. Young soldiers were brainwashed into believing they were fighting in Kenya for our glorious empire. Sixty years ago I was there as a 19-year-old national service officer. I am delighted that the government has given some token compensation for Kenyans who suffered torture (Britain’s brutal past exposed, 6 June). I still suffer from memories of the British apartheid system there and numerous instances of arbitrary killing and brutality by British forces, Kenya police and Kenyan African Rifles. In reality we protected land-grabbing British farmers and enriched UK companies.
Young troops were encouraged to shoot any African on sight in certain areas. Prize money was offered by senior officers for every death. The brains of one young black lad I shot with no warning (by orders) landed on my chest. He had no weapons, only a piece of the Bible and part of an English-language primer in his pocket. Before I burned his body near the farm where he had been working, I was ordered to cut off his hands, which I did, and put them in my ammunition pouches, as we’d run out of fingerprinting kits. Of course, he was recorded as “a terrorist”. I was told to shoot down unarmed women in the jungle because they were carrying food to the so-called “Mau Mau” – a word they never called themselves.
The whole of this Kenyan tragedy was predictable. Although Kenyan black troops had fought for the British in the second world war, they were rewarded with their land being taken away, no press or trade union freedom, suppression of political movements and slave-like conditions of work, which I witnessed. Yes, some black Kenyans did turn on others for not rising up against such indignities. But many of those who were killed were local chiefs and their supporters, who had co-operated with hugely rich white farmers. However, the revenge killings by the colonial authorities were totally disproportionate – with bombing raids, burning of villages and the forced movement of thousands of families onto poorer land, in the name of “protection”. Very few white people were killed by Africans.
But it wasn’t just the black people who suffered. I remember telling my company commander that a young soldier whose medical records showed he was only fit for clerical work should not go on a military exercise. I was laughed at. He was forced to go. After three hours’ steep climb through jungle, he died in my arms, probably from a heart attack. Because I remonstrated, I was ordered to take a donkey and carry his body, which kept slipping off, for nearly a week to deposit him at HQ on the other side of the Aberdare mountains. His mother was told he was a hero who’d died on active service.
I was sickened by my experiences. I disobeyed orders and was court-martialled and dismissed from the service. I actually thought I was going to be shot. Stripped of my uniform, I was told to make my own way home. Then I wrote to Bessie Braddock, the Labour MP, and was put back in my uniform to fly home in a RAF plane. After campaigning around the country for Kenyan independence, I received new call-up papers, because I had not finished my national service. I then decided to stand trial and become the first British man allowed to be registered as a conscientious objector against colonial warfare. History has proved me right. With these expressions of “regret” by our foreign secretary, I now feel vindicated for being pilloried as a “conchie”.
David Larder
Retford, Nottinghamshire

Dani Dayan of the Yesha Council attempts to recruit President Jimmy Carter to the cause of a restored “Judea and Samaria” (We’re on solid moral ground, 8 June) on the strength of his being, in 2009, favourably “shocked … by the reality on the ground” of the West Bank Jewish settlement bloc of Gush Etzion, and of his personally rejecting the idea of its ever becoming part of “a Palestinian territory”.
In his Trip Report of 17 June, Carter in fact writes: “At Kerev Foundation, Yossi Beilin explained the status of the Geneva Initiative annexes (basic proposals unchanged), and then we drove to the Gush Etzion settlement south of Jerusalem. This is one of the settlements that, under the Geneva Initiative, would be within the 2% of Palestine to be swapped to Israel”. Carter, in short, merely cites a proposal incorporated in the 2003 accord (with Dr Beilin as a signatory) and its supplementary annexes of 2009 – Gush Etzion being a special case, its Jewish character dating back to the last years of the British Mandate.
Failing to offer that necessary context, Dayan also omits to mention how, watching a Netanyahu speech later in the same day, Carter finds himself “appalled by his introduction of numerous obstacles to peace, some of them insurmountable” – no sharing of Jerusalem, no settlement freeze, Palestine demilitarisation and open airspace, and the removal of Hamas.
But if the ex-president really has become, in Dayan’s words, a “notable exception” to the allegedly ignorant denizens of “the international diplomatic high echelons” and their opposition to the continuing occupation of the West Bank, presumably we can await a radically revised version of his 2006 book, Palestine: Peace Not Apartheid?
William Mathew
Norwich
•  Dani Dayan’s article turns logic on its head and is an example of the old technique of hoping that if you say something often enough, in this case “solid moral ground” (five times) it will be believed. The settlements are a blatant – and under international law illegal – occupation of land belonging to someone else. Apparently, according to Dayan, the fact that over half a million live there makes them legal. Apparently looking into the eyes and faces of settlers would make the settlements legal.
Apparently the right of Jews to live in certain places is inalienable because they are cradles of Jewish civilisation. On this argument there would have to be hundreds of population exchanges throughout the world – many of claimants who occupied lands far more recently than Jews occupied Palestine.
Joseph Cocker
Leominster
•  I expect that Jews and non-Jews alike will take issue with the morality of Dani Dayan’s statement that “the right of Jews to live in Shiloh, Hebron or Beth El is inalienable”. However, I am more interested in the last paragraph. What does Mr Dayan have in mind when he says “the time has come to invest in new innovative paths to peace that unite people through acts of mutual respect”?
If he rejects a two-state solution, is he thinking of a new Israeli/Palestinian superstate or some sort of equal federation? By “acts of mutual respect” does he mean that the two peoples would live together in complete equality with all the peoples in the region having unfettered rights to live, work and pray wherever they choose? Perhaps you could give him more space in your paper or in your correspondence columns to elaborate on this. Who knows, we may be on the verge of a breakthrough that Blair and others have “flown over”.
Jeremy Solnick
Walberswick, Suffolk
•  Dani Dayan is typical of Israelis who tell Palestinians why the Jews are justified in occupying the West Bank with far less justification for their claims than the millions of Palestinians whose families, like mine, lived continuously in Palestine for hundreds if not thousands of years before being expelled by Jewish armies in 1948.
Dayan himself was born in Argentina and is proudly secular and has no religious beliefs. But this doesn’t stop him rolling out mytho-religious arguments for occupying the West Bank. Most modern Israelis are, in historical terms, recent immigrants from the west, colonisers who plotted to take over a land whose inhabitants had all the rights of any indigenous population.
Karl Sabbagh
Newbold on Stour, Warwickshire

Another day, another workplace horror (Fire at Chinese slaughterhouse kills 119 after locked gate traps victims, 4 June). Another corporate-designed disaster, aided and abetted by deregulatory, enforcement-slashing, business-friendly governments, kills yet more workers.
The Hazards Campaign is utterly appalled at the death of at least 122 workers at a poultry farm fire in China and the injury of many more. In the 20th anniversary year of the Zhili fire in Shenzhen that killed 88 young workers, and more than a century after the Triangle Shirtwaist factory fire of 1911 in New York, locked fire exits and death-trap factories should be a thing of the past everywhere. Garment factory fires in Bangladesh and Pakistan, and the Rana Plaza collapse, show that employers and governments have not implemented fire safety and building regulations or failed to enforce them, or both, and that we are going backwards not forward.
This is not a developing-nation phenomenon, it is an industrial safety phenomenon caused by a lack of respect for the lives of workers and a lack of proper regulation, properly enforced. Some may remember the 1991 Imperial Chicken fire in the US, in which 25 died, also behind locked doors. The factory had never been inspected. In the current global deregulatory tide, the fashion is to relax regulation and enforcement, not improve it – so similar disasters are becoming more and not less likely.
Workers in the UK cannot feel safe, as the government dismantles our hard-won health and safety protection net at a breakneck rate, to ensure the lack of regulation and scrutiny that corporate elites crave, here and abroad.
Hilda Palmer
Acting chair, Hazards Campaign

When my friend Colin Sale and I interviewed Tom Sharpe (Obituary, 7 June) for our school magazine in 1980, we experienced neither the ex-colonial type nor the genial old buffer that Stanley Reynolds describes as the “two mask-like personas” that Sharpe developed when “much in demand for interviews and often besieged by fans”. He was gracious, inquiring and entertaining, furnished us with outrageous anecdotes eventually deemed unsuitable for publication, treated us to lunch courtesy of his wife, Nancy, and wasted the better part of his day on us. Learning that I intended to become an ecologist, we discussed at length his recently dug pond, heat pumps and the potential for fish farming, while his advice for Colin was: “Don’t study English, it’ll make you far too critical of your own work.”
While we were indignant about his treatment in South Africa, he seemed almost to shrug it off, and to delight in the opportunity it had given him to rip the piss out of the pompous, the incompetent and illegitimate authority. And the delightful man was right, it’s such great fun!
Simon Aumonier
Steeple Aston, Oxfordshire
•  Tom loved pranks. Once, when he was visiting, my husband told that while I was out of the room, Tom took a naughty delight in peeing out of the drawing room window on to the Michaelmas daisies. He was generous and softhearted. When I was setting up the Bridport community play he made a contribution. One day, seeing me looking glum, he asked what was the matter. I confessed I thought I’d underbudgeted and we were going to make a loss. He went away and came back saying he’d talked with his wife, and they’d like to make a further contribution. In the event there was no loss but money was so tight that instead of returning his cheque I put it towards the next community play in Sherborne without asking Tom. He never complained or mentioned the matter.
Ann Jellicoe
Lyme Regis, Dorset

As current chair of What, an organisation set up in the early 1970s as West Hampstead Action on Traffic to oppose the motorway “box” in London, I could hardly believe that supporters of that doomed enterprise, which would have decimated the inner suburbs, still existed. Steve Smart’s letter (6 June), written from Malvern, at a comfortable distance from London, proves me wrong. His lament that one cannot easily drive freight across London or drive by car is odd. It’s at variance with the way public and freight transport have changed since the 1970s. There have been vast recent improvements, which affect this and other areas, to the orbital London Overground, which is also a freight line; and to the Thameslink cross-London line. These have been a stimulus for regeneration in east London. The judgement (Obituary, 4 June) of the late Andrew Roth (also a West Hampstead resident) on John Gilbert’s decision is one that many London residents would support.
Virginia Berridge
Chair, What

A mischievous comedian of Bea Lillie’s vintage would surely have enjoyed Chas Brewster’s fancifully confused suggestion (Letters, 10 June) that audiences kept applauding every time she spoke on stage when appearing in The Amorous Prawn at the Piccadilly theatre in the late 1960s. Lillie did not appear in The Amorous Prawn – which starred Evelyn Laye at the Saville a decade earlier. Lillie’s last London play was Auntie Mame – not at the Piccadilly but at the Aldephi; not in the late 1960s but in 1958. Is there anyone left alive to confirm Brewster’s assertion that the audience (which and when?) went obstructively wild over Lillie?
Nicholas de Jongh
London
•  It is scarcely surprising that the Berliner Ensemble is reluctant to keep staging Rolf Hochhuth’s The Deputy, performed here as The Representative (Brecht’s Berlin theatre company faces eviction, 10 June). It would easily get into my top 10 list of the most boring plays I ever saw in my life.
Michael Bath
Rochester, Kent
• Aside from the novels, Iain Banks (Obituary, 10 June) must surely be remembered for his letters to the Guardian, particularly as the head of the London magazine Time Out reveals that it has scrapped its letters page (Media, 10 June). No good will come of that.
Keith Flett
London
• I notice that no one comes from anywhere these days; they “hail”, as in Boards of Canada “hailing from rural Scotland” (‘We’ve become a lot more nihilistic’, G2, 7 June; Letters, 10 June).
Copland Smith
Chorlton cum Hardy, Manchester
•  So our “cherished photos” panned out at four dads, one grandad, one son and a pic of the Yorkshire Dales (Picture perfect, G2, 10 June). Something to be said about the Page 3 girls after all.
Geraldine Monk
Sheffield
• Would the Nobel committee consider withdrawing the peace award from Barack Obama and honouring Edward Snowden instead (The whistleblower, 10 June)?
Ann Black
Oxford

Independent:

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You quote William Hague as saying law-abiding citizens had “nothing to fear” from intelligence agencies’ activities. Except of course the illegal activities of governments.
On the other hand, as your article on the Tor project demonstrates (10 June), do we really want dark secret corners on the internet beyond the reach of all investigation? Worse still, do we want governments using the dark secret corners for their own illegal and unaccountable activities? 
The answer must be to eliminate secrecy on the internet but establish independent, hardware-based logging of all access to the private data of individuals, so that governments, and others, can be held to account when they abuse it.
Jon Hawksley, London EC1
 
William Hague says law-abiding citizens have nothing to fear from GCHQ. The only problem with that statement is that it is not for GCHQ to decide whether or not I’m law-abiding. In a democracy it’s a decision to be made by the courts, based upon legally obtained evidence – not uncorroborated hearsay provided by a foreign government.
Gavin Lewis, Manchester
 
Revelations about US spying on private communications have elicited from William Hague the response that if you’ve nothing to hide, you’ve nothing to fear. So why isn’t the same principle applied to lobbying, with all meetings between big business and ministers and MPs minuted and open to public scrutiny?
Michael McCarthy, London W13
 
In regard to the current GCHQ scandal, is the media frightened to mention what activities could be possibly going on inside the walls of the joint GCHQ/NSA station at RAF Menwith Hill?
George D Lewis, Brackley, Northamptonshire
 
Cuts threaten museums and libraries
You rightly draw attention to the challenges facing the Science Museum group and the possible impact on the National Railway Museum (York and Shildon), the Museum of Science and Industry (Manchester) and the National Media Museum (Bradford) (report, 4 June). It is wrong to suggest, however, that this is a form of discrimination against the North. Instead, heritage-based organisations are facing further cuts to their funding.
Our 5,000 members in these organisations will be surprised at the suggestion in your editorial (5 June) that “Britain’s free-of-charge museums could not expect to escape attention”. These organisations have suffered millions of pounds of cuts in the past three years. Substantial activities have been cut in most organisations, including reductions in service in curatorial departments, collection care, learning and education, visitor services and photography. Given the people-based nature of these organisations the reduction in these activities has inevitably fallen on staff – 89 staff within the Science Museum Group nationwide have been made redundant since May 2010.
Consequently, these further cuts are now causing the museums to consider even more drastic measures, such as the introduction of charges or closures.
Prospect agrees that introducing charges is not acceptable but neither is the closure of galleries. The museums and galleries add so much to society, including advancing an understanding of science, technology and the arts. Furthermore, every £1 invested in the arts generates £4 in the economy. We should be looking to increase investment in these valuable organisations, not reducing it.
Alan Leighton, National secretary, Prospect, Union for Professionals, London SE1
 
The Prime Minister has announced that up to a quarter of a billion pounds in grants and loans will be made available for villages, local estates or community groups to buy assets and run them as new social enterprises – including public libraries – “especially if they are under threat of closure from local government funding cuts” (report, 6 June). 
Evidently, the statutory library service is to be bundled in with the discretionary services, like swimming pools. This is in spite of the UK economy losing approximately £81bn per year from the nation’s illiteracy, as well as concerns that lack of access to a comprehensive network of libraries is contributing to a widening digital divide.  
Let us not be bamboozled into believing that Mr Cameron is offering largesse to our communities here. His government is giving with one hand, while taking away with the other.
Shirley Burnham, Swindon,  Wiltshire
 
A model housing development
Michael W Cook’s suggestion (Letters, 30 May) that local authorities should buy housing land and sell it on for self-build development reminds me of another possible way forward.
The small town where I live saw rapid expansion in the later 19th century, but our first “developer” in the modern sense built no houses at all; instead he bought a large parcel of land, laid out four parallel roads on it, and then sold individual plots, or small batches of plots, to individual builders, who developed them under covenant. The covenant was important as it specified what type of house should be built in each road, and whether for example it should have a big front garden, a small one, or none at all.
There were no planning laws or building regulations, but this tight control meant that though there was a pleasant variety in the appearance of individual dwellings, or terraces, they cohered well stylistically and in terms of building materials, which were local.
It helped that the developer was also general manager of the local building society – and it was local, catering for a population in local towns and villages of about 50,000. Mortgages could be offered on the basis often of personal knowledge of applicants and their standing. Few properties ever needed to be repossessed.
These roads have never “gone down” or “gone up” in the world. Their structures remain as sound as when they were built. Their adaptable internal spaces have been updated where necessary, and they have aged gracefully. Whatever their size, they are still regarded as premium properties locally.
Perhaps this is a model of development that could be revived today.
Arthur Percival, Faversham, Kent
 
Code’s verdict on lane-hoggers
I question Jonathan Brown’s assertion (6 June) that “motorway driving does not yet feature as part of the driving test”.
Is not knowledge of the Highway Code an integral feature of the driving test?
Even my 1978 version has a whole section devoted to motorway driving and specifically: “Lane discipline – On a three-lane carriageway the normal ‘keep to the left’ rule still applies. You may, however, stay in the middle lane when there are slower vehicles in the left-hand lane, but you should return to the left-hand lane when you have passed them. The right-hand lane is for overtaking only. If you use it, move back to the middle lane and then into the left-hand lane as soon as you can, but without cutting in.”
Graham Feakins, London SE24
 
Rule 160 of the Highway Code states:
“Keep to the left unless road signs and markings indicate otherwise. The exceptions are when you want to overtake, turn right or pass parked vehicles or pedestrians in the road.” What could be clearer?
Hogging the middle lane is simply bad driving as it can contribute to congestion, it forces good drivers who are obeying the Highway Code to cross two carriageways to overtake and it encourages dangerous undertaking manoeuvres.
Ian Quayle, Fownhope,  Herefordshire
 
There are no such things as the slow lane, the fast lane, the middle lane or the lorry lane on the motorway (Letters, 7 June).
There are the inside lane and the overtaking lanes. The Highway Code guidance is that you travel in the inside lane and overtake in the overtaking lanes. Simple.
Chris Harding, Parkstone,  Dorset
 
No windfarm in our back yard
Ed Davey (letter, 7 June) makes an admirable defence of government energy policy and highlights the need for certainty to attract investment. It’s just a shame his enthusiasm is not shared by his colleagues in the Cabinet.
The latest planning guidance, which gives a much greater role to local communities, in effect creates a veto that means future wind-farm development in England will come to a standstill. It’s difficult to see how that helps the UK meet its renewables targets. Will this new enthusiasm for empowering local communities extend to other planning decisions of similar national importance, such as HS2?
David Wallism Cirencester, Gloucestershire
 
Treasury cat’s bid for freedom
Poor Freya (“Meet Freya, the roving tabby of the Treasury” 8 June). Female cats do not normally roam, but stay within a small territory. Perhaps Freya is looking for a home more suited to her tastes. If so, she must be spitting and swearing every time well-meaning people return her to Downing Street.
And cats are politically extremely independent, nor are they impressed by wealth. If I were a cat, I wouldn’t want to share a home with George Osborne.
Lesley Docksey, Buckland Newton, Dorset
 
Back to polys, and back to work
Giving polytechnics the green light to turn into universities damaged our education system (“Think-tank demands the return of polytechnics”, 10 June). We have created a society in which everyone wants a university education and many have an unrealistic perception that a degree is the only route into a career.
The return of the polytechnic will raise awareness of how high-quality vocational programmes offer valuable alternatives, giving people more choice.
Suzie Webb, Director of Education, Association of Accounting Technicians, London EC1
Capital notion
I can’t see Birmingham airport expanding (report, 10 June), with our country being so London-centric. Why not promise to call the expanded airport London Birmingham, this could fool the investors to back it.
Kartar Uppal, West Bromwich, West Midlands

Times:

With our long coastline and tidal rivers, the UK is well placed to benefit from investment in hydro power
Sir, Gaynor Hartnell (letter, June 8) of the Renewable Energy Association may well be right that 68 per cent of the British public support wind farms. The question is, is this well informed public opinion? I doubt that the 68 per cent realise that wind energy is intermittent and generates only over a limited range of wind speeds. Because of the high visibility of such generators they confer a comfort factor to the public that something is being done about global warming.
However, the uplands of the UK have considerable amounts of hydro power which is reliable and controllable. The difficulty with this energy source is the current high cost of connection to the electricity network from many of these regions. This is a direct consequence of the structure of the electricity market. The Government’s new proposals on wind farms are to be welcomed in the expectation that it may lead to a policy review that would enable our hydro resources to be exploited.
Stewart Hill
Director, Assynt Foundation
Lochinver, Highland
Sir, Whether or not wind farms are a blot on the landscape, what is certain is that they are a most cost-inefficient means of producing electricity.
Apart from their unreliability, it does not take a scientist to compare the cost per unit when wind-generated with the cost per unit from hydro-generated power. Water is 1,000 times more dense than air, so can generate 1,000 times more energy per flow than does air.
With our long coastline and tidal rivers, the UK is well placed to benefit from investment in hydro power.
Professor R. G. Austin
Bracknell, Berks
Sir, Most of the 68 per cent who support them do not live near wind farms and are never likely to. If they did, many of them may join the 11 per cent who actively question wind energy and complain about its effect on the countryside and on residential amenity in so many ways, including for some sleepless nights from noise. The may also, like the 11 per cent, start to question more deeply the effect of wind energy on reducing our commitment to fossil fuels because of its intermittent nature. Then the 68 per cent may start to see why the anger has arisen about the way wind farms have been dealt with in the planning system up to now and appreciate why the 11 per cent hope that the new planning rules will bring about a real change.
Richard Cowen
Old Quarrington, Co Durham
Sir, The 68 per cent public support for onshore wind cited by the Renewable Energy Association has to be seen against the latest World Bank estimate that today 90 per cent of the UK population are urban dwellers. Whereas they are largely unaffected by wind turbines, the rural minority can hardly be blamed for their vociferous objections.
Most surveys depend on the questions put. While a large majority may favour renewable energy in principle, those facing the prospect of having to live close to a wind farm or single turbine are likely to respond very differently. For them the impact can be devastating. By its new policy of giving communities a greater say over the siting of these developments, the Government seems to recognise the need to ensure that those people are entitled to receive fair compensation. Until now this is something that the industry has refused to provide.
Jeremy Varcoe
Cornwall Protect
Wadebridge, Cornwall

Budget constaints mean that pproblems with council care for the elderly is one of the key causes of pressure on the emergency services
Sir, The British Red Cross agrees with the King’s Fund (report, June 4) that problems with council care for the elderly is one of the key causes of pressure on emergency services. We provided support to 50,000 people in the UK last year, helping them to live independently at home. We support vulnerable people to stay independent at home who would otherwise call 999, or help them to resettle at home, reducing pressure on hospital beds. But local councils are under severe budget constraints and all too often it is these preventive care and support services that are cut.
We are calling for the new Care Bill to ensure that everyone in need receives an offer of care and support, before they reach crisis point. This also needs to be properly funded through this month’s Spending Review.
Our work consistently shows us how a little practical support and social interaction can boost people’s resilience and wellbeing. Without these vital services vulnerable people will reach crisis point sooner, pushing them to require more costly acute care within the NHS.
Joe Farrington-Douglas
Head of public policy, British Red Cross
Sir, All the fretting about waiting times in A&E always raises a wry smile. Where my charity works in a remote part of Kenya there is no A&E. Anyone needing medical treatment has to walk sometimes hours to the nearest hospital. And when they get there, they have to pay for treatment.
David Baldwin
Glastonbury, Somerset

‘At a time when the use of illegal drugs in the UK is in decline we should be wary of those who claim that existing drug laws have failed’
Sir. An MP and chair of a Parliamentary Committee, a Green MP and others, join forces to call for support of “the global effort towards an alternative drug strategy” (letters, June 6).
Moves towards cannabis legalisation in some states of the US are now much in evidence with “Big Marijuana” following the example of “Big Tobacco” in promoting its favoured products. There are now more medical marijuana outlets in some parts of the US than Starbucks cafés with cannabis-laced soft drinks and medical marijuana vending machines already much in evidence. Is this the alternative drug strategy that the signatories to the Times letter are seeking to promote?
There are grave dangers for humanity here. We believe there is enough scope within the existing international drug conventions for countries to tackle their own drug problem and meet the needs for co-ordinated international regulation. We need a greater focus on abstinence-focused treatment, prevention, and robust enforcement and we need to strengthen, not weaken, the principle of shared responsibility between nations in how they are tackling their drug problem.
At a time when the use of illegal drugs in the UK is in decline we should be wary of those who claim that existing drug laws have failed. It is hard to imagine that any nations’ interests could be served by such a development.
Patrick J. Kennedy, Co-founder Project SAM; Antonio Maria Costa, Former Head United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime; Kevin Sabet, Co-founder, Project SAM; Stig Eric Sorheim, President, Europe Against Drugs; Kathy Gyngell, Centre for Policy Studies; Neil McKeganey, Centre for Drug Misuse Research

Over a 30-year career one hospital consultant will train four new ones, but this would lead to unsustainable growth in numbers
Sir, Any comments on the adequacy of medical school numbers (letter, June 10) should take account of the peculiar medical workforce issues of the NHS. A specialty registrar will spend 5-7 years in training in a consultant-led team. This means that over a 30-year career one consultant will train four new consultants. But this implies an unsustainable growth in consultant numbers.
In other professions, a balance is restored through the departure of many lawyers and accountants into jobs outside the main training firms. But with the NHS being a near monopoly there are fewer opportunities to move out. The numbers can only be balanced by training enough doctors to replace retiring consultants and GPs and bringing migrants who train but do not stay for the career posts. Hence the puzzle of too few and too many trainees at the same time.
Peter West
London SW20

After the end of the Second World War, it was quite common for Servicemen to find new careers in grammar schools and universities
Sir, In the late 1940s there was an influx of ex-Servicemen into the universities, who often became teachers, especially in grammar schools, which had struggled to find staff during the war (report, June 7; letter, June 10). Alongside the men from the Services were those like myself, who went up straight from school, doing National Service later. A disadvantage for us was that women students preferred the older men with the glamorous past. Thankfully my future wife thought I must be former Service since with all the affectation of callow youth I smoked a pipe.
Dr J. P. Toomey
Stourport on Severn, Worcs

Telegraph:

SIR – Dogs and their owners have a rather raw deal compared with the freedom afforded to cats and their owners.
Cats are conservatively estimated to kill 55 million songbirds a year, and are free to foul in strangers’ gardens. Were dogs to behave in such a way, their owners would be liable for prosecution. Immune from any form of punishment, cat owners appear to abdicate responsibility for their felines.
They should be made to exercise greater control over their anti-social pets.
Andrew Copeman
London SW18

SIR – As a former infantry officer, and now a deputy headmaster of St John’s School in Leatherhead, Surrey, I believe that there are many skills acquired in the military that are transferable to, and compatible with, teaching (report, June 7).
What makes a good teacher? An excellent role model, someone who leads by example, shows great integrity, communicates clearly, is fair and consistent and knows how to get the best out of people while establishing a sense of common purpose and unity. In short, exactly the same qualities that are so important to the Army and its success.
As an infantry commander, I was always struck by how so many of my young soldiers, the majority of whom had not done well at school, responded in the military environment. What I witnessed, which had a large part to play in my decision to become a teacher, was how many of them excelled when they were well looked after, treated with respect and trusted with responsibility. That was a priceless lesson and as applicable to a school as to any other organisation.
Of course, not every soldier will be a good teacher, but it is misguided not to recognise the potential merits of the Troops to Teachers scheme.
Mark Mortimer
Leatherhead, Surrey
Related Articles
Cat owners, and their pets’ anti-social antics
10 Jun 2013
SIR – As a military education and training officer, I experienced several weeks of teaching pupils in a large comprehensive school in Huddersfield, West Yorkshire, as part of my training. Servicemen, who are considering career teaching in our state school system after leaving the Armed Forces, should approach this career with caution. The transition will be a daunting and a challenging one.
Instructing a small class of motivated and well-disciplined Service personnel requires many skills and qualities. However, creating a satisfactory learning environment with 30-plus children of varying levels of academic interest, social background and self discipline, is a different story. New skills will need to be acquired, and patience tested.
However, many of our Servicemen are resourceful, multi-talented and highly motivated. They will, no doubt, become valuable members of staff in our schools, both in, and out, of the classroom.
Sqn Ldr G A Walsh RAF (Rtd)
Sleaford, Lincolnshire
SIR – It costs a prospective teacher around £40,000 to complete a degree course and teacher training. How can the same government that has imposed crippling costs on students and a strict requirement of passing qualified teacher status tests, now propose to allow former Servicemen to teach our children without meeting their own training and academic requirements?
These proposals must be resisted by the qualified professionals who prepare our children for the future.
Phil Willcock
Paphos, Cyprus
Mau Mau payment
SIR – Thank you, Tim Stanley, for your sane and balanced article (“The guilt-ridden British must not rewrite the history of the Mau Mau”, Comment, June 7).
I was born in Kenya, the daughter of a white farmer, who had gone to Africa hoping to produce food for a post world-war world. Very little is said these days of the vile nature of the blood oaths that the Mau Mau demanded of their own people, or of the atrocities carried out by them on their fellow Africans. It is hard to believe that anyone would actually boast of being Mau Mau.
My father’s stockman at the time of the uprising was visiting relatives. At considerable risk to himself and his family he travelled home to my father’s farm, in time to warn us of an imminent attack. We owe our lives to this brave man. Is this the action of someone who was the victim of our much maligned “imperialism”?
Sarah Maxwell-Wood
Banbury, Oxfordshire
SIR – I was a nursing sister in Nairobi towards the end of the Mau Mau uprising.
I looked after a very traumatised woman whose only child had been taken by the Mau Mau and beheaded. I knew of around 120 loyal Kikuyu who were hacked or burnt to death during the Lari massacre, and an elderly couple near where we farmed who were buried alive. Many Kikuyu Christians who refused to renounce their faith were murdered.
There is already a statue honouring a Mau Mau guerilla leader in Nairobi. Do we really need to compensate these people? Is an apology not sufficient?
Joan Carles
Oxford
Homework at school
SIR – I applaud the move by Jane Austen College in Norwich to ban homework (report, June 5). The word “homework” has long been a misnomer for children at many good prep schools, including Bilton Grange, where I am headmaster.
We know that children respond to clear boundaries, and so we take the approach that school is for work, and home is for family, so all homework is done in school.
Teachers should be overseeing prep rather than parents. In turn, freed from the shackles of acting as teacher, families can enjoy time together, reaping the many benefits this brings.
Peter Kirk
Rugby, Warwickshire
Reporting bad news
SIR – Charles Moore (Comment, June 8) wonders why there isn’t more good news in newspapers and television bulletins. He ignores a basic principle taught to me as a trainee reporter: “News is something someone, somewhere wants kept out of the papers; all the rest is just free advertising.”
The Daily Telegraph has done rather well sticking to that lately. Ask any MP.
Philip Moger
East Preston, West Sussex
Not music to our ears
SIR – I am told that I am a philistine for suggesting that Benjamin Britten’s music is anything other than brilliant, but has anyone ever left a concert whistling a tune of his? His work is usually a cacophony.
With the current centenary celebrations, we are subjected to some of his more obscure offerings, which are even worse than the well-known ones. At least with modern art, the viewer can walk away. Once inside the concert hall, the listener is trapped for a couple of hours.
Peter Daggett
Stafford
Coping with depression
SIR – I share the unease expressed by Tim Lott (Features, June 7) that public self-identification with bipolar disorder can be misleading, but equally the term depression is often unhelpful.
The causes of major depressive episodes are wide-ranging, often inter-related, and sometimes ferociously resistant to treatment, such that some sufferers will be led to commit suicide. This is indicative of the all-consuming, destructive nature of the illness, and, contrary to Stephen Fry’s assertion, may ultimately have a cause that can be rationally articulated.
Lack of public knowledge surrounding such torment, the social stigma attached to it, and the shortage of funding are all matters of grave concern.
Philip March
Croydon, Surrey
Sale of heritage stamps
SIR – The response by Adrian Steel, Director of the British Postal Museum & Archive (BPMA) (Letters, May 17), to concerns over the museum’s imminent sales at Sotheby’s of important philatelic archival material avoids the issues. Why are two auctions required, with the first alone estimated to raise over £5 million, when only £2 million is needed to make up the shortfall for the BPMA’s new building?
It is untrue that the sale comprises only duplicate material, as manuscript markings are unique, and there are shade and paper varieties for important future research. Museums need duplicates, for exchange and exhibiting purposes.
Has the BPMA followed all its charity trust regulations and standards, and the guiding principles applying to museum
deaccessioning? As a postal historian friend of the BPMA, I have not seen any evidence of fund-raising events being organised to save our national heritage.
The only responsible option is to suspend the auctions, pending a full public inquiry that involves key collectors and trade professionals. This week, Matthew Offord MP, is tabling a written question on this critical subject in the House.
Gavin Littaur
London NW4
Polished room service
SIR – The demise of room service (Letters, June 6) has deprived youngsters of one of the joys of staying in a hotel: the swapping of shoes put outside bedroom doors overnight for polishing.
David Edwards
White Roding, Essex
Police car presence improves motorway driving
SIR – As a former police traffic officer, I regularly patrolled the M40 and M25, (“Motorway driving”, Letters, June 7). Part of our work was to try to educate the motoring public by friendly advice; the mere presence of a marked police vehicle made drivers consider their driving manner.
Sadly, because of budget restraints, most police forces now put little emphasis on providing dedicated motorway patrols. The Highway Agency traffic officers have no enforcement powers, and the chances of being stopped by the police on the motorway are remote.
Perhaps the message “Don’t hog the middle lane or use your phone” on the overhead gantries might nudge some motorists into behaving.
Michael Carpenter
Wooburn Moor, Buckinghamshire
SIR – Derek Brumhead (Letters, June 6) supports overtaking on both sides of the motorway, as is allowed in America.
Although I have lived here for 50 years, I am American, and have often visited friends and family there, usually driving 1,500 miles or more between Maine and Maryland. I was appalled when they made overtaking on both sides legal.
Drivers in America used to be much better behaved than those here. Now the opposite is true. I have often seen cars there weaving across three lanes and back again in heavy traffic, just to gain a slight advantage. And it can be terrifying to find huge trucks overtaking you on either side.
If you can only overtake on one side, at least you can be sure of moving over safely. I hope this change will never happen here.
Lucretia Denny
Liskeard, Cornwall
SIR – David Whitaker (Letters, June 6) says that he drives at “exactly 70mph” in the middle lane of the motorway.
Constructional regulation prohibits speedometers from indicating a lower speed than the car is travelling and to avoid any possibility of this, they invariably read fast. His speedometer may well say 70mph, but his actual speed is likely to be as low as 63mph. Small wonder everybody behind him is so frustrated.
Marcus Dain
Fyfield, Essex

Irish Times:

Sir, – Opponents of Seanad abolition argue that the Seanad is necessary and should be reformed instead. A gullible voter might believe that voting No will lead to this reform. But where is the guarantee that such promised reform will materialise in the event of a No vote?
The Irish electorate has been promised Seanad reform many times before. We even had a referendum on it. In 1979, the Irish people by 92 per cent approved the Seventh Amendment which allowed the university franchise to be expanded to include other third-level institutions. In the 34 years since then, has the university franchise been expanded?
There have been numerous reports on Seanad reform. The most recent in 2004 made many suggestions, including that half the Seanad should be directly elected by the people. Has this suggestion been implemented yet?
If, after three decades, the political establishment won’t even expand the university franchise, what realistic hope is there for more radical reform?
The danger of voting No is that reform may not happen and the Seanad continues on in its current form. This autumn, I will have my first vote on the Seanad. I sincerely hope, with your assistance, that it will also be my last. – Yours, etc,
JASON FITZHARRIS,
Rivervalley,
Swords, Co Dublin.
Sir, – The main reason a Senate of 60 members was established in the first place in negotiations with Griffith and Collins in 1922 was to protect the interests of the small unionist/Protestant minority in the Free State.
A second chamber was the norm at the time in the British Commonwealth, to which the Free State was required to belong. Viewed as elitist, it was abolished and replaced by the present Seanad Éireann under the 1937 Constitution.
Forty-three of its members are elected after very competitive contests by the people whom the people elect, eg city and county councillors, incoming TDs and outgoing Senators. It is a form of indirect democracy very similar to the French system, which ensures there is no conflict of legitimacy between the two chambers.
The only elite element is that of the university seats: the electorate for which should at least have been broadened out long ago, since the 1979 referendum, to include all third-level institutions. Nevertheless, one of the Seanad’s more important functions through the mid-20th century continued to be to give a voice to the minority, represented for instance by Professor WB Stanford for 25 years, at a time when majority political and religious opinion was still fairly monolithic. He also defended the State from unfair political criticism from unionist co-religionists in Northern Ireland. Historically, the Seanad will be seen to have played a significant role since in the opening up of Irish society.

   
A chara, – Stephen Neill (Rite and Reason, June 4th) has done a great service to our country in pointing out the “increasingly dysfunctional and polarising” nature of the present abortion debate. On the previous day, and from an entirely different perspective, Cora Sherlock, spokeswoman for the Pro Life Campaign, in her article, “Coalition turning deaf ear to opponents of legislation” wrote, “If you think we’re having a debate on abortion at the moment, I’m afraid you’re mistaken”. But Sherlock makes clear that she wants a one-sided debate!
Has the time come to debate the debate?
The present ping-pong nature of “pro-life” and “pro-choice” is, for me, souless. In presenting us with a a purely static moral system, both of these polarised camps are dealing in mechanical, impersonal, selective absolutes that are rigid, external, black and white. One side’s Yes is the other side’s predictable No. There is no growth or development possible. As the months go by, it gets so boring!
We who are Christians claim to be co-creators with God and Christ-bearers, as Canon Neill reminds us. That, to me, means that we struggle to live, moment by moment, by love and compassion for all humanity. Muslims, Buddhists and other religions follow a similar vision, expressed differently.
As a Christian, I am both “pro-life” and “pro-choice”. In this middle ground I can both appreciate and withdraw from aspects of both camps. I want the great gift of life respected from the moment of conception to death: but where that involves difficult decisions, I want responsible choice to be the hallmark of respect for life. I want the heart-rending decisions of women in child-birth to be respected and supported.
Finally, I would love to see the abortion debate move to this middle ground and I thank Canon Neill for his inspiring contribution. – Is mise,
IRENE Ní MHÁILLE,
Seapoint Avenue,

Sir, – As a family friend of one of Ruairí Ó Brádaigh’s sons I was horrified at the the sight of gardaí­ in full riot gear at the funeral of a man who was grandfather to some very young children who would have been at the funeral (Home News, June 10th).
Can the spend on what looked to be an unnecessary show of force be justified, given the much talked of need to economise in the Garda Síochána? Or is this just another example of the State- sponsored bullying that has become all too familiar in the north west (Belmullet and Donegal). – Yours, etc,
SARAH GLENNANE,
Oakland Crescent,
Rathgar,
Dublin 6.
Sir, – I was at Ruairí Ó Brádaigh’s funeral ceremony at the Sacred Heart Church in Roscommon. I was outside during the service and was perturbed by the unnecessary overmanned Garda presence. They were all shapes, sizes and sexes, some in uniform, some in civilian clothes, some with bullet-proof vests and guns and others with small video cameras walking around pointedly recording everybody in attendance. There was even a spotter plane circling in the distance! As Mr Ó Brádaigh was of a senior age, quite a number of the mourners were old-age pensioners.
I cannot call them gardaí any more; they were more like old- style RUC. Their presence and demeanour at the church and graveyard were the only reason there was any trouble. The distress to the Ó Brádaigh family and friends by this over-the-top policing was visible and I am tempted to apply the despised name of “blueshirts” to these permanent employees of our State and Republic.
It was a depressing sight and bordered on the fascist! – Yours, etc,
K NOLAN,
Caldragh,
Carrick-on-Shannon,

Sir, – Billy Hawkes’s comment that the gardaí have significant powers to access data regarding citizens’ use of the Internet is correct, but he is not comparing like with like (Breaking News, June 10th).
The significant difference between Ireland and the US is that in Ireland a strict judicial process is required for the Garda Síochána to legally gain access. A court or ministerial order is required.
In the US there is no judicial oversight. The “Patriot Act” allows US law enforcement agencies to self-regulate. It is well-known that this system has been very widely abused.
US companies in Ireland are obliged to comply with the Patriot Act even if this means that they may be breaking data protection law in Ireland or Europe.
Simple fact: data handled by US companies worldwide can be accessed by US government agencies at their discretion. It is important Irish organisations ensure that their employees are educated and informed with respect to the implications of this because they are significant.
Many of the inmates of Guantánamo found themselves there as a consequence of this and many of them have still not been even tried, let alone found guilty. – Yours, etc,
Dr ROBERT STRUNZ,

   
Sir, – Cormac O’Raifeartaigh (Life Science, May 30th) is in serious error in claiming that greenhouse gas emissions are accelerating because he only cites figures for one of the greenhouse gases, CO2.
However, when the other greenhouse gases are included the warming effect of all the gases has actually decelerated since 1990!
This is because the other greenhouse gases – mainly CFCs and methane – have not been increasing as fast since 1990 as they did in the period 1960-1990.
Of course this slower rate of increase in the warming effect since 1990 does not mean that we can ignore climate change, but it may give us more time to innovate our way out of the problem. – Yours, etc,
TONY CAREY,
Glencree Road,

Sir, – Frank McNally’s highlighting of the upcoming Flann O’Brien symposium in Rome and the first biennial award for O’Brien Scholarship – the Fahrt Memorial Prize (An Irishman’s Diary, June 6th) brings to mind another famous Irish satirist.
In 1721, Jonathan Swift wrote “The Benefit of Farting” in which he suggested, among other things, that we could judge the character of a person through the “noxious humours of their bowels”.
It’s certainly a novel idea and might also be applied to politicians and their utterances, but much as I admire Swift, regrettably I guess that listening to hot air is more preferable than inhaling it!
His own opinion on politicians wasn’t much higher, as he indicated in Gulliver’s Travels: “Whoever makes two ears of corn, or two blades of grass to grow where only one grew before, deserves better of mankind, and does more essential service to his country, than the whole race of politicians put together”.
Given the amount of hot air that will undoubtedly be expelled in praise of another Irish writer on Sunday June 16th, spare a thought for the same Jonathan Swift who, 300 years ago this coming week, ascended to the Deanery of St Patrick’s Cathedral on June 13th, 1713. – Yours, etc,
MARK LAWLER,

Irish Independent:
* The forthcoming referendum on the abolition of the Seanad is a good illustration of the type of insidious politics we have to deal with in Ireland nowadays.
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There is no doubt whatsoever that the Seanad is in dire need of reform – even senators admit as much.
Yet the Government, in its determination to centralise power in the Dail, is refusing to consider reforming the upper house.
The proposal being put to the people is a stark choice between abolishing the Seanad altogether, or retaining it in its current form.
I suspect this is a very deliberate attempt on the Government’s behalf to take advantage of the public disillusionment with the Seanad in order to increase support for the abolition amendment.
In the absence of a true democratic choice with regard to the future of the Seanad, I believe we should opt for the safest course of action and reject its abolition.
Especially when one considers the proposal that was mooted briefly last week, whereby a group of ‘experts’ – handpicked by the Government – would effectively replace the Seanad.
Even though that proposal appears to have been abandoned, the fact that it was even discussed is a disturbing development.
Such centralisation of legislative and executive power in an ever-decreasing number of individuals is a serious threat to healthy democracy. Retaining the Seanad is important for democracy in the State.
Once we have ensured its existence, it must then be reformed to make it fit for purpose.
Simon O’Connor
Crumlin, Dublin 12
PERFECT SMILE
* Under a blue sky, with the sun on my back, while walking through the streets of the capital this weekend, I witnessed a strange phenomenon.
It came about through a strange configuration of muscles in a beautiful woman’s face. It was transformational, something akin to what we once called a smile. Alas, it has been so long since I have seen such a positive display of emotional contentment I could not be sure.
This is post-crash Ireland after all.
I wonder might any of your readers be in a position to confirm similar sightings?
Ed Toal
Monkstown, Co Dublin
DAIL REFORM THE PRIORITY
* Only two reasons have been given by recent contributors for retaining the Senate: it provides a platform for influential public voices and future leaders; and we also need it to contain a “dysfunctional Dail” and a “discredited political system”.
If it is abolished, then Dail reform becomes a “vital priority”, with special attention to the disconnection between the Executive and Parliament.
Realistically, Dail reform should precede the Senate referendum. The final solution must include electoral reform. Conforming to the constitutional requirement to elect one TD per 30,000 people has turned reform into superficial, regressive patchwork.
Multi-seat constituencies – by crossing local authority boundaries – downgrade local government. Ministers should not be burdened by local duties or be appointed on the basis of local voting success rather than suitability. Many suitable candidates – including some senators – are deterred from contesting.
A properly reformed Dail could lead to a new definition of the purpose, function and structure of the Senate, as an alternative to its abolition. Reform remains within the gift of career politicians. We may have to ask them to take back and don the green jerseys they gave us in 2008 and 2010.
Tom Martin
Celbridge, Co Kildare.
TAXING TIMES
* I have just taxed my car for three months.
In a time of huge financial difficulty for Irish people, our Government is creaming profits from folk like me who can’t afford to pay for 12 months. It costs me €90 extra a year to pay quarterly. There is no justification for this since I logged in and did the administrative work myself.
When I printed the payment page to place on my dashboard until the disc arrived, the page was set up to print over two pages. I know how to print only the page that I want but my mother, for example, wouldn’t know how to do this.
It is inconceivable at a time when austerity and eco-friendly are the buzzwords that every person who taxes their car should print two pages instead of one. The public system is still so out of touch with the needs of the ordinary citizen. It is incredible.
Sarah Nic Lochlainn
Ardee, Co Louth
THE LIONS STILL BITE
* A recent letter writer observed that the words of Aesop, from ancient Greece, are still relevant today. May I add that ancient Rome still applies – the senators are in revolt and the lions still bite!
Sean Kelly
Tramore, Waterford
RETHINKING THE CRISIS
* A first indicator of hope appears on the horizon as the IMF and European Commission squabble about action taken on the Greek collapse. Each questions the other’s diagnosis and remedial action of the problem and both are actually correct. The diagnosis was wrong then and is still wrong, and perhaps logical thinking is at last about to break out.
The economic problems of the 21st century are basically not financial at all. They derive from a transformation of production capacity that is unprecedented and unrecognised.
There is now an ability to produce more than the world can consume, which is causing chaos in markets, investment, banking, employment, growth and practically every aspect of economics.
Technology has taken economic activity to a new place, where sterile economic policies of a bygone age are futile, counterproductive and no longer fit for purpose.
Employment will not be restored until it is understood that work is diminishing as every hour passes and jobs must be reconsidered as a means of distributing wealth rather than creating it.
Advancing technology can and will produce more wealth; indeed more of everything than the world needs or can consume.
It must be the task of the IMF and the European Commission to devise methods of administering such phenomenal and unprecedented technological success for the benefit of humanity. Instead they treat the crisis as financial failure because their obsolete philosophy is unable to keep pace with the phenomenal technological advances. Perhaps the developing spat between two very powerful but misguided heavyweights of world administration will force them to rethink their fundamental misjudgments and begin proper administration of the best economic time there ever was for the benefit of all.
Padraic Neary
Tubbercurry, Co Sligo
COST OF GREEN SHOOTS
* I am curious as to whether I am the only person who is cutting back entirely all the hedging/greenery that I am (was) fortunate enough to have growing in my garden? The reason that I am doing so is that the cost of disposing of the off-shoots when cutting back has become too expensive, with the ‘green bins’ being weighed by the waste management companies.
I felt particularly bad yesterday when I discovered an empty bird’s nest in the Butterfly bush I totally cut down – but I can no longer afford to have the privilege of growing such wonderful greenery. Next job: concreting over the grass.
Name and address with editor
Irish Independent


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